Abstract

Neonatal survival requires precise control of breathing and cardiovascular action, with fatal consequences or severe injury without support. Prematurity presents multiple opportunities to disrupt cardiorespiratory regulation, leading to expressions of apnea of prematurity, periodic breathing, and inappropriate cardiovascular responses to apnea. Failed breathing control can result from altered breathing drives, typically arising from untimely development of sensory or motor coordination processes. Some drives, such as temperature, are a special concern in neonates with low body mass, enhancing susceptibility to rapid body cooling. Chemical drives, such as pH or CO2 or O2, may be inadequately developed; in some conditions, such as congenital central hypoventilation syndrome (CCHS), breathing responses to CO2 or low O2 may be reduced or absent, and coupling of cardiovascular responses to breathing changes are abolished. Sleep states exert profound influences on both chemical and temperature drives, with rapid eye movement (REM) sleep potentially modifying descending temperature influences, and state transitions significantly altering respiratory responses to chemical stimuli. In addition, neonates spend the majority of time in REM sleep, a state which induces a generalized inhibition of skeletal muscle activity that abolishes muscle tone to upper airway and thoracic wall muscles, enhancing the likelihood for obstructive sleep apnea. Although disrupted regulatory drives can often be replaced by positive (or negative) pressure ventilation, such as continuous positive airway pressure or enhanced by manipulating neurotransmitter action via caffeine, those approaches may exert negative consequences in the long term; the lungs of neonates, especially premature infants, are fragile, and easily injured by positive pressure. The consequences of caffeine use, acting directly on neural receptors, although seemingly innocuous in the near-term, may have long-term concerns and disrupts the integrity of sleep. The developmental breathing field needs improved means to support ventilation when one or more drives to respiration fail, and when the cardiovascular system, depending heavily on interactions with breathing, is compromised. Neuromodulatory procedures which manipulate the vestibular system to stabilize breathing or use tactile or proprioceptive stimuli to activate long-established reflexive mechanisms coupling limb movement with respiratory efforts can provide support for central and obstructive apnea, as well as for periodic breathing and cardiovascular action, particularly during sleep.

Highlights

  • The rate of breathing and extent of air exchange in infants is normally controlled by sensing CO2 and O2, by core body temperature, and by voluntary breathing efforts, all of which are partially modulated by sensory feedback of lung and muscle stretch as well as by afferent signals from airflow

  • The loss of motor influences to upper airway muscles during the paralysis of REM sleep can result in obstructive sleep apnea (OSA)

  • Seizures, or hypoxic damage can alter respiratory motor timing circuitry, or delay circulation, leading to a mismatch of central and peripheral chemoreception and modify timing of inspiratory signaling to respiratory muscles, all of which are heavily dependent on the integrity of deep cerebellar nuclei and control influences on those nuclei [15]. These functional distortions can result in periodic breathing, a start-stop respiratory patterning leading to intermittent hypoxia exposure that is injurious to brain tissue [16]

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Summary

Neuromodulatory Support for Breathing and Cardiovascular Action

Neonatal survival requires precise control of breathing and cardiovascular action, with fatal consequences or severe injury without support. Failed breathing control can result from altered breathing drives, typically arising from untimely development of sensory or motor coordination processes. Some drives, such as temperature, are a special concern in neonates with low body mass, enhancing susceptibility to rapid body cooling. Cardiorespiratory Support for Infants vestibular system to stabilize breathing or use tactile or proprioceptive stimuli to activate long-established reflexive mechanisms coupling limb movement with respiratory efforts can provide support for central and obstructive apnea, as well as for periodic breathing and cardiovascular action, during sleep

INTRODUCTION
OVERCOMING LOST OR REDUCED RESPIRATORY DRIVES
INTERVENTION DEVICE
PERIODIC BREATHING
ALTERNATIVE OPTIONS FOR NEONATAL AND ADULT APNEA
CONCLUSIONS
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