Gasping and other cardiorespiratory patterns during sudden infant deaths

Pediatr Res. 1999 Mar;45(3):350-4. doi: 10.1203/00006450-199903000-00010.

Abstract

To gain information on the cardiorespiratory changes occurring immediately before sudden infant death (SID), recordings of heart rate and chest wall impedance were analyzed in nine infants who had died at a median age of 4.8 mo (range 1-6 mo) while attached to a memory monitor. Postmortem diagnoses were sudden infant death syndrome in seven infants and mild bronchopulmonary dysplasia in two infants. Primary cause of the monitor alarm was bradycardia in all but two infants. Heart rate fell to < or = 15 bpm 7.5 min (range 1.4-25.2 min) after the first alarm; there was no indication of heart block or ventricular tachycardia. Apnea (> 20 s) began 0.3 to 13.7 min (median 2.7 min) after this alarm in five infants and 7 to 20 s before it in three infants; in the remaining infant, stimulation occurred before any apnea. Gasping was already present at the time of the first monitor alarm in three infants and occurred within 2.7 min after it in a further four infants. One infant only began to gasp 13 min after the first monitor alarm. The duration of gasping ranged from 3 s to 11 min in those five infants in whom it was not interrupted by resuscitation. The latter was given to three infants 4, 21, and 228 s after the monitor alarm but had no effect on the ongoing decrease in heart rate. Since gasping only occurs if PaO2 is < 5-15 mm Hg, it is most likely that the seven infants who gasped at or shortly after the first monitor alarm were already severely hypoxemic at that time. This hypoxemia developed in the absence of prolonged central apnea. The role of other mechanisms potentially resulting in severe hypoxemia, such as upper airway obstruction or rebreathing, remains to be determined.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Apnea
  • Heart Rate
  • Humans
  • Infant
  • Infant, Newborn
  • Respiration
  • Sudden Infant Death*