Baby's Sighs Tied to Breathing Pattern
A baby's sweet sighs may do more than
endear it to its parents -- they may help reset regular breathing
patterns and help lungs develop, researchers reported.
Such deep breaths, which healthy
babies take every 50 to 100 breaths, help reopen parts of the
lung, especially tiny airways prone to collapse, the researchers
said.
But the team at the University
Children's Hospital in Bern, Switzerland, and in Perth, Australia,
wanted to know if sighs did more.
They studied 25 healthy 1-month-old
infants while they were sleeping in a crib or in a parent's arms,
checking the heart rate and blood oxygen saturation as well as
other breathing-related factors.
Writing in the Journal of Applied
Physiology, David Baldwin and colleagues said they found that
sighs are a mechanism for improving the neurological control of
breathing.
Just before a sigh, an infant's
breathing becomes just a bit too regular, they said. The sigh
adds some healthy variability to the breathing pattern, they said.
They noted that sick and premature
infants seem to sigh more often than healthier babies. They may
be struggling to reset their systems.
It may be possible, the researchers
said, to use breathing patterns to identify those premature infants
who are most at risk for problems of abnormal breathing control,
including sudden infant death syndrome -- also known as SIDS or
crib death.
Reference
Source 89
August 13, 2004
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