Abstract

A sinusoidal fetal heart rate and elevated fetal arginine vasopressin levels were found in two bled fetal lambs. Arginine vasopressin was continuously infused intravenously in chronically instrumented fetal lambs at rates ranging between 1.0 and 90 mlU/kg/min. No sinusoidal heart rate occurred in 21 experiments on six control animals with intact vagal nerves. Atropine at doses <0.4 mg had no effect (six experiments on three animals). Higher doses of atropine (>1.2 mg) resulted in sinusoidal heart rate (24 experiments on six animals). Twenty-three infusions were performed in five bilaterally vagotomized fetuses, and the sinusoidal heart rate was successfully induced in 17 experiments. The arginine vasopressin infusion rate was <1.5 mlU/kg/min on the six occasions,in which the sinusoidal heart rate did not appear. All sinusoidal heart rate patterns were associated with fluctuation of fetal arterial pressure at the same frequency. There was a linear correlation between the amplitude of sinusoidal heart rate and magnitude of arterial blood pressure fluctuation. The amplitude of sinusoidal heart rate increased with the concentration of arginine vasopressin infused. Modification of sinusoidal heart rate pattern was attempted with use of sympathetic agonists and antagonists. The possible etiology and mechanisms of sinusoidal heart rate pattern are discussed.

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