Affiliation:
1. Department of Pediatrics, Rainbow Babies & Children's Hospital, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio
Abstract
The first postnatal weeks represent a period of development in the rat during which the respiratory neural control system may be vulnerable to aberrant environmental stressors. In the present study, we investigated whether sustained hypoxia (SH; 11% O2) exposure starting at different postnatal ages differentially modifies the acute hypoxic (HVR) and hypercapnic ventilatory response (HCVR). Three different groups of rat pups were exposed to 5 days of SH, starting at either postnatal age 1 (SH1–5), 11 (SH11–15), or 21 (SH21–25) days. Whole body plethysmography was used to assess the HVR and HCVR the day after SH exposure ended. The primary results indicated that 1) the HVR and HCVR of SH11–15 rats were absent or attenuated (respectively) compared with age-matched rats raised in normoxia; 2) there was a profoundly high (∼84% of pups) incidence of unexplained mortality in the SH11–15 rats; and 3) these phenomena were unique to the SH11–15 group with no comparable effect of the SH exposure on the HVR, HCVR, or mortality in the younger (SH1–5) or older (SH21–25) rats. These results share several commonalities with the risk factors thought to underlie the etiology of sudden infant death syndrome, including 1) a vulnerable neonate; 2) a critical period of development; and 3) an environmental stressor.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Physiology
Cited by
26 articles.
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