Journal
NEUROPATHOLOGY
Volume 28, Issue 1, Pages 10-16Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1440-1789.2007.00824.x
Keywords
neuropathology; pre-Botzinger complex; SIDS; sudden fetal death; vital functions
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The authors are the first to identify in man the pre-Botzinger complex, a structure of the brainstem critical for respiratory rhythmogenesis, previously investigated only in rats. The evaluation of the neurokinin 1 receptors and somatostatin immunoreactivity in a total of 63 brains from 25 fetuses, nine newborns and 29 infants, allowed to delineate the anatomic structure and the boundaries of this human neural center in a restricted area of the ventrolateral medulla at the obex level, ventral to the semicompact ambiguus nucleus. The neurons of the pre-Botzinger complex were roundish in fetuses before 30 gestational weeks and lengthened after birth, embedded in a dendritic system belonging to the reticular formation. Besides, structural and/or functional alterations of the pre-Botzinger complex were present in a high percentage of sudden deaths (47%), prevalent in late fetal deaths. In particular, different developmental defects (hypoplasia with a decreased neuronal number and/or dendritic hypodevelopment of the reticular formation, abnormal neuronal morphology, immunonegativity of neurotransmitters, and agenesis) were found. The authors suggest that the pre-Botzinger complex contains a variety of neurons not only involved in respiratory rhythm generation, but more extensively, essential to the control of all vital functions. Sudden death and in particular sudden unexpected fetal death could therefore be ascribed to a selective process when developmental alterations of the pre-Botzinger complex arise.
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