We examined fetal plasma corticoids and flow rate, electrolyte composition, and surfactant content of tracheal fluid in chronic experiments with eight fetal lambs. From 120 to 148 days of gestation the rate of fluid production was 4.5 ml/kg per h, and there was no change in mean fluid sodium (147.8 meq/1), chloride (153.1 meq/1), calcium (2.2 mg/100 ml), and pH (6.23). Tracheal fluid potassium increased from 4.3 meq/1 at 120-130 days to 8.9 meq/1 at term, while plasma sodium, chloride, calcium, pH, and potassium were constant at 146.1 meq/1, 110.0 meq/1, 12.1 mg/100 ml, 7.39, and 4.0 meq/1, respectively. Plasma corticoids were less than 1.5 mug/100 ml total (0.3 mug/100 ml free) until 130 days, when they increased rapidly to 10.5 total (3.2 free) at 148 days. Surfactant was first detected in tracheal fluid between 124 and 133 days and its secretion increased rapidly after 135 days to a value of 125 mug/kg per h at 148 days. A sudden increase in fetal plasma corticoids does not seem to be the stimulus for appearance of surfactant in the lamb, although these hormones may induce the rapid accumulation of surfactant prior to delivery.
We studied tracheal fluid (TF) production in 14 fetal lambs: 6 controls, 6 receiving atropine on 1 or more of the last 7 days before birth, and 2 with bilateral section of the cervical vagosympathetic trunk. A cannula diverted all TF into an intrauterine bag; we collected TF intermittently and measured its volume. All ewes delivered spontaneously at 128-150 days' gestation. TF production decreased before birth in all fetuses except one control. TF production decreased before birth in all fetuses except one control. TF production did not correlate with fetal arterial blood gas tensions, hematocrit, or plasma proteins. In controls only, TF production correlated with fetal arterial pH (P less than 0.02); however, the pH range was small and the correlation has questionable physiological significance. For all fetuses, TF production during the 7 days before birth correlated inversely with the plasma cortisol concentration of 48 h previously (n = 36; r = -0.603; P less than 0.001). We conclude a) TF production in fetal lambs decreases before spontaneous term or preterm labor; b) this decrease is not affected by atropine or by section of the cervical vagosympathetic trunk; and c) the decrease in TF production may be related to increased secretion of cortisol.
We measured tracheal fluid production rate and pulmonary surfactant flux in 12 sets of twin fetal lambs of 102 to 135 days' gestation. In nine of these sets we also measured surfactant flux and the concentration of saturated lecithin in the lungs before and during dexamethasone infusion into one of the twins. The average tracheal fluid flow rate was 3.25 ml/kg/hr (SD 1.6) and, relative to body weight, did not change between 103 and 135 days' gestation or during the infusion of dexamethasone. In untreated fetuses, surfactant was detected between 108 and 130 days and its flux gradually increased but remained less than 150µg/kg/hr at 135 days' gestation; the amount of disaturated lecithin in the lung relative to body weight increased 13-fold from 108 to 134 days. From these data we calculated that the minimal rate of synthesis of disaturated lecithin was increased about 4-fold by dexamethasone from 108 to 120 days; this enhancement fell to about 1.8-fold by 135 days. The rate of secretion of disaturated lecithin, as estimated by surfactant flux in tracheal fluid, was increased by dexamethasone throughout the interval of the study.
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