When It Comes to Babies, a
Sigh Isn’t Just a Sigh
Besides
helping infants’ lungs mature, sighs may “reset” breathing regulation
mechanism
BETHESDA, MD (August 25, 2004) – As if new
parents don’t have enough to worry about getting in synch with their
infants, many of them wonder “what’s with these sighs?”
Of course adults sigh; not as often as infants, though
sometimes often enough to annoy others. But with an adult, you can ask if
there’s a problem. With newborns, it’s hard to know if it’s good or bad,
partly because how often they occur can vary from once every 50 breaths to
every 100 or more. The good news is, sighs are good. The issue is, how good,
and exactly what purpose do they serve?
Role in mechanical lung development
It’s been pretty well documented by researchers that
deep inspirations, the technical phrase for sighs, play a significant role
in helping the mechanical function of healthy lungs. Infants actively
regulate their lung function, elevating lung volume above what would be
expected by their relatively stiff lung tissue and floppy chest wall
compared to adults.
These seemingly “spontaneous” deep breaths often help
re-open parts of the lung, especially very small airways, or alveoli, which
are prone to collapse. Thus sighs help keep the lungs inflated making them
more efficient and possibly also improving the exchange of gases.
On the clinical side, abnormalities of breathing
control are occasionally seen in adults and infants, especially during
illness. Premature babies often have transient pauses in their breathing
pattern, called “periodic breathing.” When these pauses last for an
abnormally long period, they are known as “apneas.” It is these excessively
long pauses that may reflect some degree of abnormal function in the system
that controls breathing. In its most severe form, this may be seen in
conditions such as sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS).
Researchers in Switzerland, Australia seek to find
control center implications
Researchers at the University Children’s Hospital in
Bern, Switzerland, and in Perth, Australia, wanted to know if in addition to
mechanical benefits, sighs also helped development of communications between
the respiratory control center, a specialized group of cells in the
brainstem, and the lungs themselves.
They studied 25 healthy one-month-old infants during
quiet sleep, while they were either lying in a crib or in a parent’s arms.
The researchers hypothesized that sighs may play a crucial role in resetting
mechanisms for the negative feedback system responsible for controlling
breathing, somewhat like hitting the CTRL+ALT+DEL sequence on a computer.
While constantly monitoring heart rate and oxygen saturation during the
cross-sectional observational study, the researchers measured the regulation
of breathing, including breath-to-breath tidal volume, minimum exhaled
oxygen and end-tidal carbon dioxide.
The study, entitled “Effects of sighs on breathing
memory and dynamics in healthy infants,” is published online in the Journal of Applied Physiology
(June 2004 Article in Press), one of 14 peer-reviewed journals
published by the American Physiological Society.
Lead author David N. Baldwin works at the Department of
Pediatric Respiratory Medicine, University Children’s Hospital, Bern,
Switzerland and the Institute for Child Health and Centre for Child Health
Research, Perth, Western Australia, Australia; J. Jane Pillow is also at
Australia’s Institute for Child Health, Perth; Bela Suki is at the
Department of Biomedical Engineering, Boston University, Boston, Mass.; and
Hanna L. Roiha, Stefan Minocchieri and Urs Frey are at University Children’s
Hospital, Bern.
The research in this study was supported in part by
Swiss National Fund Grant (No. 32-68025.02). Partial support to Dr. Baldwin
was provided by Swiss Government Grant (No. 2002-0041) and European
Respiratory Society Long-Term Research Fellowship (LTRF 2002-032).
Findings and discussion
The data showed that a “highly regulated and stable
negative feedback loop system exists in healthy infants and that sighs
represent a mechanism for improving the memory associated with neuro-respiratory
control of breathing….” They explain that prior to a sigh, infant breathing
seems to become more regular, which may not be the best pattern. However
“the sigh itself introduces a significant increase in variability of both
tidal volume and minute ventilation,” which measures both respiratory rate
and tidal volume. This variability lasts for about 15 breaths, they found,
“after which time the system returns rapidly to a baseline level of
fluctuation.”
The researchers say that the breathing pattern in young
infants, a mathematical rhythm of sorts, is controlled by a long-term
memory, which is necessary for a kind of homeokinesis that leads to a
breathing rate of about 40 breaths a minute. Initially, they were somewhat
surprised to find that this long-term memory is not affected by a sigh,
though since its role is to assure long-term stability of breathing control,
this makes sense. But the short-term memory, which controls breath-to-breath
variability, is affected by the sigh, and seems to prepare the breathing
“system” for any changes in the environment, such as noise, movement, or
waking up.
Next steps: Seek sigh effector and possible
integrative function
Despite the recent increase in the study of infant
breathing, the exact factors that cause sighing, and the total affect they
have on infant development is still unclear. One intriguing area of research
is to see whether sighs serve some sort of function to link the breathing
control mechanism and mechanical maturation.
Also they note that sick infants and premature infants
seem to sigh more often than normal babies. Thus another research area could
look into how the control mechanisms and communication functions as well as
short- and long-term memories may differ in these circumstances. The very
long-term goal then might be to see if it’s possible to identify those
premature infants who are most at risk for problems of abnormal breathing
control, including SIDS.
Source: The article, “Effects of sighs on
breathing memory and dynamics in healthy infants,” is online in the
Journal of Applied Physiology, and is scheduled to appear in the
November issue, published by the American Physiological Society. A
copy of the abstract is available to the public at
www.the-aps.org.
Editors’ note: A copy of the research paper by
Baldwin et al. is available to the media. Members of the media are
encouraged to obtain an electronic version and to interview members of the
research team. To do so, please contact Donna Krupa at APS (301) 634-7209,
cell (703) 967-2751 or
dkrupa@the-aps.org.
The
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