Age-related changes of 20 variables describing breathing patterns, transcutaneous blood gases, and estimated CO2 response during sleep were examined in a cross-sectional study of 30 healthy control infants and 150 healthy siblings of sudden infant death syndrome victims within the first 18 mo of life. Whole-night measurements were performed using noninvasive respiratory induction plethysmography and transcutaneous blood gas electrodes. Each candidate for the study was extensively screened and found to be healthy. Mean transcutaneous PCO2 (PtcCO2, median 40.3 Torr) and maximum PtcCO2 (median 44.8 Torr), as well as the estimated ventilatory response to inhalation of 2% CO2 in air during regular breathing, causing a 20-36% increase of ventilation per Torr PtcCO2, were not related to postnatal age. In contrast, paradoxical breathing decreased from 49.5 to 0% of total sleep time (TST), periodic breathing from 5.5 to 0% TST, and respiratory rate during regular breathing from 40 to 22 breaths/min; the portion of regular breathing increased from 32 to 55% TST and mean and minimum transcutaneous PO2 from 65.4 and 47 to 69.7 and 52 Torr with increasing stability. The largest changes occurred in the first 6 mo of life. Maximum apnea duration (9.5 s, maximum 16 s), mean apnea duration (3.74 s, breathing pauses > or = 2 s), and time spent apneic per hour of irregular breathing (199 s/h) were not related to age. The comparison of data from siblings and controls showed similarities in the above-mentioned variables. No significant differences were found among the groups. Also a comparison of 30 pairs of siblings and controls, matched for age, gender, birth, and actual body weight, did not show significant differences. The present study extends the knowledge of development of breathing control beyond the first 6 mo of life.
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