Impact of cord clamping on haemodynamic transition in term newborn infants

Author:

Chioma RobertoORCID,Finn Daragh,Healy David B,Herlihy Ita,Livingstone Vicki,Panaviene Jurate,Dempsey Eugene MORCID

Abstract

ObjectiveTo assess the haemodynamic consequences of cord clamping (CC) in healthy term infants.DesignCohort study.SettingTertiary maternity hospital.Patients46 full-term vigorous infants born by caesarean section.InterventionsEchocardiography was performed before CC, immediately after CC and at 5 min after birth.Main outcome measuresPulsed wave Doppler-derived cardiac output and the pulmonary artery acceleration time indexed to the right ventricle ejection time were obtained. As markers of loading fluctuations, the myocardial performance indexes and the velocities of the tricuspid and mitral valve annuli were determined with tissue Doppler imaging. Heart rate was derived from Doppler imaging throughout the assessments.ResultsLeft ventricular output increased throughout the first minutes after birth (mean (SD) 222.4 (32.5) mL/kg/min before CC vs 239.7 (33.6) mL/kg/min at 5 min, p=0.01), while right ventricular output decreased (306.5 (48.2) mL/kg/min before vs 272.8 (55.5) mL/kg/min immediately after CC, p=0.001). The loading conditions of both ventricles were transiently impaired by CC, recovering at 5 min. Heart rate progressively decreased after birth, following a linear trend temporarily increased by CC. The variation in left ventricular output across the CC was directly correlated to the fluctuation of left ventricular preload over the same period (p=0.03).ConclusionsThis study illustrates the cardiovascular consequences of CC in term vigorous infants and offers insight into the haemodynamic transition from fetal to neonatal circulation in spontaneously breathing newborns. Strategies that aim to enhance left ventricular preload before CC may prevent complications of perinatal cardiovascular imbalance.

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Obstetrics and Gynecology,General Medicine,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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