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Peripheral chemoreflex control of fetal heart rate decelerations overwhelms the baroreflex during brief umbilical cord occlusions in fetal sheep.

Christopher A LearMichi KasaiLindsea C BoothPaul P DruryJoanne O DavidsonYoshiki MaedaShoichi MagawaEtsuko MiyagiTomoaki IkedaJenny A WestgateMary E SlingoAlistair Jan Gunn
Published in: The Journal of physiology (2020)
Fetal heart rate (FHR) monitoring is widely used to assess fetal wellbeing during labour, yet the physiology underlying FHR patterns remains incompletely understood. The baroreflex is widely believed to mediate brief intrapartum decelerations, but evidence supporting this theory is lacking. We therefore investigated the physiological changes in near-term fetal sheep during brief repeated umbilical cord occlusions (brief-UCOs, n = 15). We compared this to separate cohorts that underwent a phenylephrine challenge to stimulate the baroreflex (n = 9) or were instrumented with near-infrared spectroscopy and underwent prolonged 15-min complete UCO (prolonged-UCO, n = 9). The first 3-4 s of brief-UCOs were associated with hypertension (P = 0.000), a fall in FHR by 9.7-16.9 bpm (P = 0.002). The FHR/MAP relationship during this time was consistent with that observed during a phenylephrine-induced baroreflex. At 4-5 s, the FHR/MAP relationship began to deviate from the phenylephrine baroreflex curve as FHR fell independently of MAP until its nadir in association with intense peripheral vasoconstriction (P = 0.000). During prolonged-UCO, cerebral oxygenation remained steady until 4 s after the start of prolonged-UCO, and then began to fall (P = 0.000). FHR and cerebral oxygenation then fell in parallel until the FHR nadir. In conclusion, the baroreflex has a minor role in mediating the first 3-4 s of FHR decelerations during complete UCO, but thereafter the peripheral chemoreflex is the dominant mediator. Overall, the baroreflex is neither necessary nor sufficient to produce deep, rapid decelerations characteristic of variable decelerations; it is therefore likely to be a minor contributor to intrapartum decelerations.
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