Repetitive umbilical cord occlusions in immature sheep fetuses resulted in functional, not structural changes of the fetal brain in surviving fetuses. At this gestational age, amplitude analysis is more sensitive than spectral analysis of the ECoG signal to functional changes of the compromised fetal brain.
To determine whether hypoxemia inhibits fetal activity by substances from the mother or placenta, six fetal lambs were chronically instrumented at 128-132 days gestation for extra-corporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO). Severe maternal hypoxemia (arterial PO2 decreased to 6.00 +/- 0.60 kPa) was produced while fetal arterial PO2 was maintained normoxic or mildly hyperoxic using ECMO. The incidences of fetal breathing movements were 34.8 +/- 3.1% (SE) during baseline before ECMO, 36.8 +/- 3.4% during baseline with ECMO, and 21.4 +/- 3.5% (P < 0.05 compared with baseline with ECMO) during maternal hypoxemia. The durations of periods of breathing were 9.8 +/- 1.2 min before ECMO, 9.3 +/- 1.1 min with ECMO, and 10.5 +/- 1.7 min (P = NS) during maternal hypoxemia. In 7 of 14 maternal hypoxemia experiments, breathing activity stopped too late (7-23 min) to be attributed to maternal hypoxemia. Fetal electrocorticographic activity (P = NS), nuchal electromyographic activity (P = NS), and eye movements were normal before ECMO, with ECMO, and during maternal hypoxemia. Fetal blood pressure and heart rate did not change. We conclude that the inhibition of fetal activity during maternal hypoxemia does not seem to be mediated by release of factors from the maternal side of the placenta or the ewe.
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