SUMMARY1. Electrocortical and electro-ocular activity, breathing movements and nuchal muscle activity were recorded continuously in the unanaesthetized lamb in Utero (95-135 days).2. Electrocortical activity was recorded simultaneously from various sites. The bi-parietal electrocorticogram gave the clearest differentiation between high-and low-voltage activity.3. The onset of cortical differentiation from 110 days gestation was attributed to the superimposition of high-voltage electrocortical activity at 3-10 Hz on existing low-voltage activity.4. Three distinct patterns in the relationships between electrocortical activity, ocular activity breathing movements and nuchal muscle activity were observed at 95-106, 107-114 and 120-135 days.5. Isocapnic hypoxia caused a diminution in fetal breathing from 95-135 days gestation, quantitatively greater near term. After cortical differentiation, hypoxia caused the appearance of high-voltage activity within 4 min, if low-voltage electrocortical activity was present initially. 6. The relationship, changing with age, between electrocortical activity, breathing movements, ocular and nuchal muscle activity is discussed.
Summary. The T/QRS ratio of the fetal ECG was obtained during labour from 25 women with normal pregnancies. The poor signal‐to‐noise ratio of the unprocessed signals, chiefly due to baseline wander, led to a wide variation between individual measurements. This problem was overcome by data averaging, the ratio being expressed as a mean over 1‐min epochs. The average T/QRS ratio of each labour record ranged from 4% to 23% with a mean of 10% (for all 25). The average range (between 5th and 95th centile) of the 1‐min T/QRS ratios was 13% and there were no significant changes as labour progressed. The effect of contractions on the T/QRS ratio was measured from eight subjects and found to be inconsistent.
Summary. The T/QRS ratio of the fetal electrocardiogram (ECG) was recorded to within 30 min of delivery from 105 women in labour. There were no significant differences in the mean T/QRS ratio in the last hour of record between those with normal and intermediate, or abnormal fetal heart rate (FHR) patterns. In 66 labours the mean T/QRS ratio in the first hour of record was compared with that of the last hour; the only significant change was a small decrease in the mean ratio from 11% to 7% in a group of 11 fetuses with an abnormal FHR pattern throughout the recording time. Eight babies were born with evidence of acidosis (umbilical artery pH<7.16), and another four were born in poor condition (1 min Apgar score <4) without evidence of acidosis; none had a mean last hour T/QRS ratio significantly different from the previously established normal range.
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