Abstract

Periodic breathing is common in normal infants, but may be associated with prolonged apnea leading to crib death. The mechanisms of periodic breathing and its relation to normal breathing patterns are unclear. We recorded respiratory and heart rate (HR) patterns of 11 healthy newborn infants during quiet sleep, in both normal and periodic breathing. Spectral analysis of the respiratory pattern revealed a low-frequency (LF) periodicity in normal breathing approximately equal to the frequency of periodic breathing when this occurs. Periodic breathing thus appears to be an exaggeration of an underlying slow amplitude variation which is present in regular breathing. LF periodicity also appeared in the HR pattern in both normal and periodic breathing, suggesting an LF modulation of cardiovascular control as well. The lack of a definite phase relation between HR and ventilation at LF may indicate dominant peripheral, rather than central, interactions between HR and respiration at these frequencies.

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