Passive compliance (C) has been measured in 10 infants at 10--90 min after birth and in 10 infants at a few days of life by recording mouth pressure after airways occlusions at end inspiration. From the slope of the expiratory flow-volume curve, the passive time constant (tau) and resistance (R = tau/C) have been also computed. Examination of the changes of C with time and of the expiratory flow-volume curves indicates that the end-expiratory volume is maintained above functional residual capacity at both ages, but significantly more so at a few days (7.6 ml) than at 10--90 min (3.5 ml). The passive time constant (tau = C . R) is shorter at the early age due to the smaller C. The active compliance (C') and resistance (R') values have been estimated from the pressure generated by the infant when the airways are occluded at end expiration. The active time constant of the respiratory system (tau' = C' . R') is less than tau, due to a smaller active compliance, particularly at a few days. The active resistance is on the contrary similar to R. The active stiffening of the respiratory system provides more stability of the infant's respiratory system and a more ready volume response for any given change in pressure; its price, however, is a higher work of breathing. At optimal breathing rates, in fact, the active work is 127% (10--90 min) to 183% (a few days) higher than that computed from the passive values. The inspiratory flow wave tends to be squared at both ages minimizing the energy losses due to friction.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.