4.3 Article

Lack of evidence for impaired preload or Bezold-Jarisch activation during brief umbilical cord occlusions in fetal sheep

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/ajpregu.00357.2020

Keywords

Bezold-Jarisch; fetal heart rate; hypoxemia; intrapartum decelerations; vagotomy

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Funding

  1. Health Research Council of New Zealand [17/601]

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This study found that bilateral cervical vagotomy in fetal sheep resulted in increased carotid and femoral blood flow during umbilical cord occlusion (UCO), which does not support the hypothesis of impaired cardiac preload during UCO. The cardiovascular responses to vagotomy do not suggest that the Bezold-Jarisch reflex is activated by UCO, therefore the reflex is unlikely to contribute to intrapartum decelerations.
Impaired cardiac preload secondary to umbilical cord occlusion (UCO) has been hypothesized to contribute to intrapartum decelerations, brief falls in fetal heart rate (FHR), through activation of the Bezold-Jarisch reflex. This cardioprotective reflex increases parasympathetic and inhibits sympathetic outflows triggering hypotension, bradycardia, and peripheral vasodilation, but its potential to contribute to intrapartum decelerations has never been systematically examined. In this study, we performed bilateral cervical vagotomy to remove the afferent arm and the efferent parasympathetic arm of the Bezold-Jarisch reflex. Twenty-two chronically instrumented fetal sheep at 0.85 of gestation received vagotomy (n = 7) or sham vagotomy (control, n = 15), followed by three 1-min complete UCOs separated by 4-min reperfusion periods. UCOs in control fetuses were associated with a rapid fall in FHR and reduced femoral blood flow mediated by intense femoral vasoconstriction, leading to hypertension. Vagotomy abolished the rapid fall in FHR (P < 0.001) and, despite reduced diastolic filling time, increased both carotid (P < 0.001) and femoral (P < 0.05) blood flow during UCOs, secondary to carotid vasodilation (P < 0.01) and delayed femoral vasoconstriction (P < 0.05). Finally, vagotomy was associated with an attenuated rise in cortical impedance during UCOs (P < 0.05), consistent with improved cerebral substrate supply. In conclusion, increased carotid and femoral blood flows after vagotomy are consistent with increased left and right ventricular output, which is incompatible with the hypothesis that labor-like UCOs impair ventricular filling. Overall, the cardiovascular responses to vagotomy do not support the hypothesis that the Bezold-Jarisch reflex is activated by UCO. The Bezold-Jarisch reflex is therefore mechanistically unable to contribute to intrapartum decelerations.

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