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Evolving changes in fetal heart rate variability and brain injury after hypoxia‐ischaemia in preterm fetal sheep
Author(s) -
Yamaguchi Kyohei,
Lear Christopher A.,
Beacom Michael J.,
Ikeda Tomoaki,
Gunn Alistair J.,
Bennet Laura
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
the journal of physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.802
H-Index - 240
eISSN - 1469-7793
pISSN - 0022-3751
DOI - 10.1113/jp275434
Subject(s) - medicine , hypoxia (environmental) , fetus , ischemia , heart rate , cardiology , heart rate variability , anesthesia , pregnancy , blood pressure , biology , chemistry , organic chemistry , oxygen , genetics
Key points Fetal heart rate variability is a critical index of fetal wellbeing. Suppression of heart rate variability may provide prognostic information on the risk of hypoxic‐ischaemic brain injury after birth. In the present study, we report the evolution of fetal heart rate variability after both mild and severe hypoxia‐ischaemia. Both mild and severe hypoxia‐ischaemia were associated with an initial, brief suppression of multiple measures of heart rate variability. This was followed by normal or increased levels of heart rate variability during the latent phase of injury. Severe hypoxia‐ischaemia was subsequently associated with the prolonged suppression of measures of heart rate variability during the secondary phase of injury, which is the period of time when brain injury is no longer treatable. These findings suggest that a biphasic pattern of heart rate variability may be an early marker of brain injury when treatment or intervention is probably most effective.Abstract Hypoxia‐ischaemia (HI) is a major contributor to preterm brain injury, although there are currently no reliable biomarkers for identifying infants who are at risk. We tested the hypothesis that fetal heart rate (FHR) and FHR variability (FHRV) would identify evolving brain injury after HI. Fetal sheep at 0.7 of gestation were subjected to either 15 ( n = 10) or 25 min ( n = 17) of complete umbilical cord occlusion or sham occlusion ( n = 12). FHR and four measures of FHRV [short‐term variation, long‐term variation, standard deviation of normal to normal R‐R intervals (SDNN), root mean square of successive differences) were assessed until 72 h after HI. All measures of FHRV were suppressed for the first 3–4 h in the 15 min group and 1–2 h in the 25 min group. Measures of FHRV recovered to control levels by 4 h in the 15 min group, whereas the 25 min group showed tachycardia and an increase in short‐term variation and SDNN from 4 to 6 h after occlusion. The measures of FHRV then progressively declined in the 25 min group and became profoundly suppressed from 18 to 48 h. A partial recovery of FHRV measures towards control levels was observed in the 25 min group from 49 to 72 h. These findings illustrate the complex regulation of FHRV after both mild and severe HI and suggest that the longitudinal analysis of FHR and FHRV after HI may be able to help determine the timing and severity of preterm HI.