The effect of cooling on breathing and shivering in unanaesthetized fetal lambs in utero
- PMID: 6644623
- PMCID: PMC1193932
- DOI: 10.1113/jphysiol.1983.sp014905
The effect of cooling on breathing and shivering in unanaesthetized fetal lambs in utero
Abstract
The effects of cooling have been studied in chronically instrumented unanaesthetized fetal lambs of 106-132 days gestation. Cold stimulation of cutaneous thermoreceptors by means of a coil placed around the fetus in the amniotic cavity induced continuous breathing which was associated with high-voltage electrocortical activity throughout the cooling period. Direct internal cooling by means of an intragastric cooling coil did not alter fetal breathing or sleep-state patterns. Shivering occurred in response to both external and internal cooling, and this response was present as early as 106 days gestation, well before the appearance of high-voltage sleep. In older fetuses there was evidence of a reduction in thermoregulatory responses during low-voltage electrocortical activity, but not of the complete suspension of thermoregulation characteristic of low-voltage (r.e.m.) sleep seen in mature animals. It is concluded that deep regular breathing associated with high-voltage electrocortical activity can be induced by cold stimulation of cutaneous thermoreceptors, but not by a reduction in core temperature alone. Furthermore, fetal responses to cooling are present as early as 106 days gestation.
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