Literature DB >> 9181671

Impaired cardiac function during postnatal hypoxia in rats exposed to nicotine prenatally: implications for perinatal morbidity and mortality, and for sudden infant death syndrome.

T A Slotkin1, J L Saleh, E C McCook, F J Seidler.   

Abstract

Maternal smoking correlates highly with parturitional/neonatal death including SIDS; nicotine exposure of fetal rats reproduces the increased mortality when animals are tested postnatally with hypoxia. In the current study, pregnant rats received nicotine infusions simulating smokers' plasma nicotine levels. At 1-2 days postpartum, the nicotine group displayed normal heart rates, EKG waveforms, and respiratory rates in normoxia. With hypoxia (5% O2, 10 min), controls showed initial tachycardia and a subsequent slight decline in heart rate; atrioventricular conduction was gradually impaired and repolarization abnormalities also appeared. The nicotine group showed no tachycardia and heart rate declined rapidly and precipitously within a few minutes after commencing hypoxia; otherwise, EKG alterations mimicked the controls'. Changes in respiration were identical in the two groups: initial tachypnea and subsequent decline. These results suggest that prenatal nicotine affects sinoatrial reactivity to hypoxia without impairing cardiac conduction per se. These mechanisms explain increased hypoxia-induced mortality in animals exposed to prenatal nicotine, and in man could account for increased morbidity/mortality and SIDS. Our results also indicate the need to test adverse effects of fetal drug exposure using conditions that challenge any given physiological system rather than relying solely on changes under basal conditions.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9181671     DOI: 10.1002/(SICI)1096-9926(199703)55:3<177::AID-TERA2>3.0.CO;2-#

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Teratology        ISSN: 0040-3709


  32 in total

Review 1.  Respiratory modulation of premotor cardiac vagal neurons in the brainstem.

Authors:  Olga Dergacheva; Kathleen J Griffioen; Robert A Neff; David Mendelowitz
Journal:  Respir Physiol Neurobiol       Date:  2010-05-07       Impact factor: 1.931

Review 2.  The effects of ante- and postnatal hypoxia on the central nervous system and their correction with peptide hormones.

Authors:  M V Maslova; A S Maklakova; N A Sokolova; I P Ashmarin; E N Goncharenko; Ya V Krushinskaya
Journal:  Neurosci Behav Physiol       Date:  2003-07

3.  Differential control of central cardiorespiratory interactions by hypercapnia and the effect of prenatal nicotine.

Authors:  Zheng-Gui Huang; Kathleen J S Griffioen; Xin Wang; Olga Dergacheva; Harriet Kamendi; Christopher Gorini; Euguenia Bouairi; David Mendelowitz
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2006-01-04       Impact factor: 6.167

4.  Changes in maternal and fetal nicotine distribution after maternal administration of monoclonal nicotine-specific antibody to rats.

Authors:  D E Keyler; M G Lesage; M B Dufek; P R Pentel
Journal:  Int Immunopharmacol       Date:  2006-08-04       Impact factor: 4.932

5.  Developmental nicotine exposure alters potassium currents in hypoglossal motoneurons of neonatal rat.

Authors:  Marina Cholanian; Jesse Wealing; Richard B Levine; Ralph F Fregosi
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2017-02-01       Impact factor: 2.714

6.  Prenatal nicotine exposure enhances the trigeminocardiac reflex via serotonin receptor facilitation in brainstem pathways.

Authors:  C Gorini; H Jameson; A L Woerman; D C Perry; D Mendelowitz
Journal:  J Appl Physiol (1985)       Date:  2013-06-13

Review 7.  Cardiorespiratory coupling in health and disease.

Authors:  Alfredo J Garcia; Jenna E Koschnitzky; Tatiana Dashevskiy; Jan-Marino Ramirez
Journal:  Auton Neurosci       Date:  2013-03-13       Impact factor: 3.145

8.  5-HT2 receptors modulate excitatory neurotransmission to cardiac vagal neurons within the nucleus ambiguus evoked during and after hypoxia.

Authors:  O Dergacheva; H Kamendi; X Wang; R A Pinol; J Frank; C Gorini; H Jameson; M R Lovett-Barr; D Mendelowitz
Journal:  Neuroscience       Date:  2009-09-20       Impact factor: 3.590

9.  beta 2 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor subunit modulates protective responses to stress: A receptor basis for sleep-disordered breathing after nicotine exposure.

Authors:  Gary Cohen; Zhi-Yan Han; Régis Grailhe; Jorge Gallego; Claude Gaultier; Jean-Pierre Changeux; Hugo Lagercrantz
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2002-09-12       Impact factor: 11.205

10.  Secondary motoneurons in juvenile and adult zebrafish: axonal pathfinding errors caused by embryonic nicotine exposure.

Authors:  Evdokia Menelaou; Kurt R Svoboda
Journal:  J Comp Neurol       Date:  2009-01-20       Impact factor: 3.215

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