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MIT HST 071 - FETAL SURVEILLANCE

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Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology HST.071: Human Reproductive Biology Course Director: Professor Henry Klapholz HST 071IN SUMMARY FETAL SURVEILLANCE FETAL SURVEILLANCE An Example of a Fetal Heart Rate Tracing Figure removed due to copyright restrictions. Variability • Beat to be rate changes reflect CNS activity • Vagal tone is modulated by CNS activity • Variability is a measure of fetal (or adult) arousal state • REM sleep produces considerable variability • REM sleep associated with fetal breathing • Variability is reduced or eliminated by – Drugs (barbiturates, narcotics, MgSO4, diazepam) – Infection – Hypoxia – Prematurity • Long term variability reflects continuous changes in the sympathetic-parasympathetic balance • Sinus rhythm exhibits fluctuations around the mean heart rate • Frequent small adjustments in heart rate are made by cardiovascular control mechanisms (the details of this are not well worked out) • Results in periodic fluctuations in heart rate • The main periodic fluctuations are – Respiratory – Sinus arrhythmia – Baroreflex-related – Thermoregulation-related •Inspiratory inhibition of the vagal tone: heart rate shows fluctuations with a frequency equal to the respiratory rate •This inspiratory inhibition is evoked primarily by central production of impulses from the medullary respiratory to the cardiovascular center •Peripheral reflexes due to hemodynamic changes and thoracic stretch receptors contribute to respiratory sinus arrhythmia •Respiratory sinus arrhythmia can be abolished by atropine or vagotomy -parasympathetically mediated (esp. in fetus) •10-second rhythm in heart rate originates from self-oscillation in the vasomotor part of the baroreflex loopIN SUMMARY HST 071 FETAL SURVEILLANCE –This results from negative feedback in the baroreflex and are accompanied by synchronous fluctuations in blood pressure –The frequency of the fluctuations is determined by the time delay of the system –Augmented when sympathetic tone is increased decrease with sympathetic or parasympathetic blockade •Peripheral vascular resistance also exhibits intrinsic oscillations of low frequency •These oscillations can be influenced by thermal changes in the skin •Thought to arise from thermoregulatory peripheral blood flow adjustments •Fluctuations in peripheral vascular resistance accompanied by fluctuations with the same frequency in blood pressure and heart rate •Mediated by the sympathetic nervous system Sleep State •Investigations in the fetus and newborn have revealed that during rapid eye movement (REM) sleep LTV is increased and STV is decreased compared to during non-REM sleep •These differences between REM and non-REM sleep are due mainly to a shift in the vagal-sympathetic balance from a higher sympathetic •Vagal tone during REM sleep shifts to higher vagal tone during non-REM sleep •In addition, the slower and more regular breathing in non-REM sleep (more respiratory sinus arrhythmia, thus more STV) contributes to the differences found Adults •Adult heart rate variability has been investigated primarily in awake adults •Enables investigators to instruct the participants to breath at fixed frequencies •Heart rate variability studies in adults have revealed that body posture influences heart rate variability •In the upright position baroreflex-related heart rate variability is enhanced due to an increased sympathetic tone. •Respiratory sinus arrhythmia is augmented in the supine position Fetal and Neonatal Heart Rate Variability •In obstetrics it has been noticed that acute hypoxia resulted in an increase in heart rate variability •Chronic hypoxemia was accompanied by low heart rate variability •Low heart rate variability is associated with low Apgar scores and pH at birth •Attributed to depression of the central nervous system •Persistent fixed fetal heart rate pattern was also described in anencephaly and fetal decerebration •Reduction in heart rate variability appears to be a rather late sign of fetal compromise Fetal and Neonatal Heart Rate Variability •In asphyxiated newborns, diminished heart rate variability is also found •Transient loss of heart rate variability indicates a good prognosis –Due to cerebral edema, •Sustained loss of heart rate variability –predicts neurologic sequelae –neonatal death –probably due to irreversible damage to the brain or brain stemIN SUMMARY HST 071 FETAL SURVEILLANCE Fetal and Neonatal Heart Rate Variability •Severe neonatal respiratory distress syndrome is accompanied by a reduction in low-frequency heart rate variability –transient depression of the medulla oblongata due to elevated pCO2 levels and acidosis •If the respiratory distress improves --> heart rate variability increases •Reduction in LTV in newborns with clinically significant patent ductus arteriosus –ascribed to a marginal oxygen supply of the myocardium that limits fluctuations in heart rate •Loss of heart rate variability also has been found in infants with periventricular hemorrhage –damage of vasomotor areas in the medulla oblongata –due to increased intracranial pressure •In infants who subsequently died of the sudden infant death syndrome –higher heart rate –lower heart rate variability Time Domain Analysis • Two types of heart rate variability indices • Beat-to-beat or short-term variability (STV) – Represent fast changes in heart rate. • Long-term variability (LTV) indices – Slower fluctuations (fewer than 6 per minute) • Calculated from the R-R intervals occurring in a chosen time window (usually between 0.5 and 5 minutes) • Example of a simple STV – Standard deviation (SD) of beat-to-beat R-R interval differences within the time window • Examples of LTV indices – SD of all the R-R intervals – difference between the maximum and minimum R-R interval length, within the window Fourier Analysis • Respiratory sinus arrhythmia gives a spectral peak around the respiratory frequency • Baroreflex-related heart rate fluctuations are found as a spectral peak around 0.1 Hz in adults • Thermoregulation-related fluctuations are found as a peak below 0.05 Hz • CNS (cortical) contribution seen as higher frequency components • Heart rate variability can be assessed in two ways – statistical operations on R-R intervals (time domain analysis) – by


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