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Am J Physiol 228: 1685-1689, 1975;
0002-9513/75 $5.00
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American Journal of Physiology, Vol 228, Issue 6, 1685-1689
Copyright © 1975 by American Physiological Society


ARTICLES

Factors influencing neurohumoral control of the heart in the newborn dog

WP Geis, CJ Tatooles, DV Priola, and WF Friedman

Several investigators have documented immaturity of cardiac autonomic innervation in neonates. To evaluate the integrity of afferent and efferent responses and to determine the role of circulating catecholamines in newborns, 50 puppies and 24 adult dogswere studied with the use of chloralose anesthesia. Interventions were: bilateralvagotomy, bilateral carotid occlusion, central vagus stimulation, stellate stimulation, bilateral adrenalectomy, infusion of norepinephrine or isoproterenol, and intravenoustyramine. Newborns exhibited supersensitivity to exogenous norepinephrine, isoproterenol, and stellate stimulation; responses to carotid occlusion and central vagal stimulation were comparable in both groups. Newborns had less resting vagal tone. After adrenalectomy, newborns exhibited a more marked decline in systemic pressureand heart compared to adults. Myocardial catecholamine content in newborns was 1/10 that in adults, whereas plasma catecholamine concentration in newborns was 30-fold greater than in adults. These data demonstrate functional integrity of afferent and efferent cardiac autonomic pathways in the newborn, define in vivo supersensitivity to the sympathetic neurotransmitter, and suggest a dominant role of circulating catecholamines in modulation of cardiovascular events in neonates.


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C. Fleming, T. P. Riordon, A. Ortiz, and J. R. Woods JR
Effect of Method of Delivery on Heart Rate Pattern in the Early Newborn
Clinical Pediatrics, June 1, 1981; 20(6): 408 - 411.
[Abstract] [PDF]




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