Early human development
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Early human development · Feb 1998
Developmental patterns of heart rate and variability in infants with persistent apnea of infancy.
During periods of regular breathing, heart rate is slower and more variable in healthy (no history of respiratory distress syndrome) prematurely born infants with persistent apnea, relative to full-term control infants of comparable post-conceptional ages. We tested the hypothesis that the cardiovascular differences may be linked to the persistent apnea, rather than premature birth, by assessing heart rate and variability in full-term infants with persistent apnea. ⋯ Healthy prematurely born infants with persistent apnea showed cardiovascular alterations similar to those of full-term infants with apnea; these alterations differed from those observed in very premature infants with histories of respiratory distress. The postnatal development of cardiovascular aberrations in infants with persistent apnea suggests that mechanisms accompanying apneic events may contribute to long-term alterations in autonomic control.