Pediatric research
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Congenital central hypoventilation syndrome (CCHS) patients exhibit respiratory deficits to ventilatory challenges, diminished breathing drive during sleep, and reduction of respiratory-related heart rate variation, but at least partially preserved peripheral chemoreception. We hypothesized that integration of afferent activity with respiratory motor output is deficient in CCHS, rather than chemoreceptor failure, and that examination of trends in heart and breathing rates and variabilities following ventilatory challenges may clarify the deficient mechanisms. Twelve children with CCHS and 12 age- and gender-matched control cases were subjected to hyperoxic hypercapnic, poikylocapnic hypoxic, and hyperoxic challenges while supine. ⋯ No heart rate variability group differences emerged in hypoxia, and only a late increase for CCHS cases developed in hyperoxia. The findings indicate retention of aspects of chemoreceptor sensitivity in CCHS cases. The heart rate alterations to ventilatory challenges suggest specific compensatory responses of a slower nature remain intact in CCHS, whereas other rapidly changing components are deficient.