新生羔羊睡眠中的循环。

Australian paediatric journal Pub Date : 1986-01-01
A M Walker, R S Horne, G Bowes, P Berger
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引用次数: 0

摘要

心血管系统、恒温系统和行为系统的相互作用在生命早期具有特别重要的意义,因为这一发育时期心输出量高,循环储备有限,特别容易受到热应激的影响,并且长时间的快速眼动(REM)睡眠可能会暂停热调节。在未受应激的羔羊中,睡眠和清醒行为状态之间存在显著的心血管差异,其中快速眼动睡眠状态尤为突出。在快速眼动睡眠时,心输出量变化大,心率低,每搏量大。高水平的心输出量与快速眼动期间较差的氧合和呼吸相结合可能对新生儿构成风险,因为与成人相比,新生儿的心脏性能已经很高,而储备较低。羔羊在清醒和安静睡眠时对冷应激的反应是心排血量和耗氧量增加,而在快速眼动睡眠时则不然。快速眼动睡眠中体温调节过程的暂停也表明这是新生儿更脆弱的状态。如果羔羊的血压急剧下降,就会发生从安静睡眠或快速眼动睡眠到清醒的觉醒反应。在快速眼动睡眠中,唤醒前有一个延迟,比安静睡眠中要长。在这两种状态下,动物在大约40%的低血压试验中都不能唤醒。在理解婴儿猝死综合征的心血管机制方面,这种睡眠状态的共同特征(无法唤醒)可能比状态相关的差异(在快速眼动中唤醒前的较长延迟)更重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The circulation in sleep in newborn lambs.

Interaction of the cardiovascular, homeothermic and behavioural systems has particular significance in early life as this period of development sees high cardiac output, limited circulatory reserves, a particular vulnerability to thermal stress, and long periods of rapid eye movement (REM) sleep during which thermal regulation may be suspended. In unstressed lambs, significant cardiovascular differences exist between behavioural states of sleep and wakefulness, with the REM sleep-state being outstanding. In REM sleep there is wide cardiac output variation, a low heart rate, and a high stroke volume. High levels of cardiac output occurring in combination with poorer oxygenation and respiration in REM may represent a risk to the newborn, as cardiac performance is already high and reserves are low in comparison with the adult. Lambs respond to cool stress with increases of cardiac output and oxygen consumption in wakefulness and quiet sleep, but not in REM sleep. Suspension of thermoregulatory processes in REM sleep also points to this as the more vulnerable state for the newborn. Arousal responses from quiet sleep or REM sleep to wakefulness occur if lambs are subjected to acute reductions of blood pressure. There is a delay before arousal which is longer in REM sleep than in quiet sleep. Animals fail to arouse in approximately 40% of hypotensive tests in both states. This shared feature of the sleep-states (failure to arouse) may be more important than the state-related difference (longer delay before arousal in REM) in understanding a cardiovascular mechanism of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome.

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