Objective: To characterize postnatal maturation of the biphasic ventilatory response to hypoxia in order to determine whether it persists beyond the first weeks of life in preterm infants, and the contributions of respiratory frequency and tidal volume to this response.
Methods: Stable preterm infants were studied at two postnatal ages, 2 to 3 weeks (n = 12) and 4 to 8 weeks (n = 12), before hospital discharge at 35 weeks (range, 33 to 38 weeks) of postconceptional age. Infants were exposed to 5 minutes of 15% (or 13%) inspired oxygen; ventilation, oxygen saturation, end-tidal partial pressure of carbon dioxide, and heart rate were simultaneously recorded.
Results: Minute ventilation exhibited a characteristic biphasic response to hypoxia at both postnatal ages, regardless of the development of periodic breathing. At both ages there was a transient increase in tidal volume, which peaked at 1 minute, accompanied by a sustained decrease in respiratory frequency as a result of significant prolongation of expiratory time.
Conclusion: The characteristic biphasic ventilatory response to hypoxia persists into the second month of postnatal life in preterm infants. We speculate that this finding is consistent with the prolonged vulnerability of such infants to neonatal apnea.