therapyTimes.com is a daily source for Music, Nursing, Nutrition, Occupational, Pediatric, Physical, Respiratory and Speech Therapy Professionals containing editorials, articles and radiology jobs.

Music Therapy, Nursing, Nutrition Therapy, Occupational Therapy, Pediatric Therapy, Physical Therapy, Respiratory Therapy, Speech Therapy




search site:    
 


home | login | register





  University of Arizona
www.arizona.edu



:: CAM Therapies High Among Those with OSAHS

:: Asthma Management and Evaluation

:: Gene Stops Excess Mucus in Respiratory Disease

:: Breathe Easy

:: Respiratory Failure in Patients with Chronic Respiratory Disorder

:: Predicting the Risk of Death in COPD May Help Physicians to Individualize Treatment

:: How Coughing is Triggered by Environmental Irritants

:: Sleep Apnea Duration More Affecting Than Severity

:: Surgery for children with sleep apnea improves quality of life

:: Need for Emergency Airway Surgery for Hard-to-Intubate Patients Reduced

:: Mountaineers Measure Lowest Human Blood Oxygen Levels on Record

:: Molecular Biology of Sleep Apnea Could Lead to New Treatments

:: Dendritic Cells Spark Inflammation in Smokers’ Lungs

:: Detecting Disease Using Portable, Precise Gas Sensor

:: Swine Flu Fears Close More Summer Camps

:: Discovery Of Increased ‘Sibling Risk’ Of Obstructive Sleep Apnea In Children

:: Risk Factors For Sleep Disordered Breathing In Children: Waist Size And Body Mass Index

:: What Happened to the Flu?

:: Doubts About the Accepted Origin of Pulmonary Embolism

:: Air Pollution Linked To Hospitalizations For Pneumonia In Seniors

:: Steroids Don’t Work in Childhood Respiratory Infections

:: Study Reveals Long Lasting Airway Blockages in Medicated Asthma Patients

:: Obstructive Sleep Apnea May Worsen Diabetes

:: Common Surgical Procedure Effective Treatment for Sleep Apnea

:: Self-Treatment Results in Lower Overall Healthcare Costs for COPD Sufferers

:: Nosespray Vaccine Using Aloe Vera Has Potential

:: Air Pollution in Tunnels Concentrated by up to 1000 Times

:: Researchers Track Down Protein Responsible for Chronic Rhinosinusitis with Polyps

:: Patients with CRS Have Increased Incidence of Other Chronic Illnesses

:: A Matter of Life and Breath

:: Respiratory Weakness in ICU Morbidity

:: Adults With Asthma Not Getting Their Flu Shots

:: How Carbon Nanotubes Can Affect Lining of the Lungs

:: Signals Point to Enhanced Ventilators

:: Radiography used to identify teens with sleep apnea

:: Breathlessness Eased in Patients with Rare, Often Fatal Disease

:: Palliative Care in Respiratory Therapy

:: Beyond the Flu

:: Enzyme And Vitamin Define The Yin And Yang Of Asthma

:: Potential For A Fast, Accurate Urine Test For Pneumonia

:: Intense Cessation Treatment Successful in High-Risk Smokers

:: Noninvasive Ventilation Should be Used in Epidemics

:: Yoga Helps Asthma Patients In 10 Weeks

:: Study Finds Link Between Parental Stress, Air Pollution, And Children’s Risk For Developing Asthma

:: Innovative Approach to Identify and Treat Lung Fibrosis

:: Animals Linked to Human Chlamydia Pneumoniae

:: Beyond Tradition

:: American Lung Association Calls For Tighter Nitrogen Dioxide Air Pollution Standard

:: Unexplained Respiratory Infections Lead to New Discovery

:: Even Healthy Lungs Labor At Acceptable Ozone Levels

:: Study Touts Benefits of Autologous Cell Transplantation Therapy

:: Acute Respiratory Disease Poses Significantly Greater Risk for Black Americans

:: Inappropriate Sepsis Therapy Leads to Fivefold Reduction in Survival

:: A Breath of Fresh Ideas

:: Cell Phones Will Help Scientists Monitor Air Pollution in San Diego

Emergency Medical Record



::  Occupational Therapist-Outpatient | US - TX
::  Occupational Therapist-Rehab | US - OH
::  Occupational Therapist-Rehab | US - TX
::  Occupational Therapist-School | US - AR
::  Occupational Therapist-School | US - TN
::  Occupational Therapist-Skilled | US - TX
::  Licensed Physical Therapists and Physical Therapy Assistants | US - NY
::  Occupational Therapists and Occupational Therapy Assistants | US - NY
::  Home Care Physical Therapists | US - CT
::  OCCUPATIONAL THERAPISTS (WHEELING, IL) | US - IL
::  Physical Therapy Jobs
By Onward Healthcare
  [more]

   
home :: departments :: in the news

Baby's Breath
04.10.06

Article available online at: http://www.therapytimes.com/041006RT


Exposure to nicotine the equivalent of smoking two packs of cigarettes a day produced complicated, abnormal breathing development during the first 18 days of newborn rats, Tucson-based University of Arizona researchers report.

Ralph Fregosi, presenting the results at three American Physiological Society sessions at the Experimental Biology conference, says his team “found that the required increase in breathing in response to reduced oxygen supply was lower in nicotine-exposed animals compared to the controls over their first nine days. This suggests that prenatal nicotine exposure reduces the ability of a neonatal animal to respond to low blood oxygen, which can lead to prolonged and possibly lethal apneas.”

Between nine and 18 days, the situation reversed, and nicotine-exposed rats’ response was actually higher than controls, showing an overall complicated, abnormal breathing development over the 18 days.

Cause of Apneas Still Unknown, Ability to Restart Breathing Remains Key

Fregosi says his laboratory want to better understand how smoking during pregnancy disturbs breathing in infants because of increased rates of asthma, sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS), obstructive sleep apnea and impaired arousal responses during sleep. “Our laboratory is particularly interested in the strong association between maternal smoking on the one hand, and the increased incidence of infantile SIDS and obstructive sleep apnea on the other.”

In the current study the team studied how prenatal nicotine exposure affected neonate’s ability to respond to decreased levels of blood oxygen, and/or low oxygen combined with elevated carbon dioxide. “This is important when the neonate has an ‘apnea,’ or cessation of breathing, when they are sleeping, because under these conditions the oxygen can be reduced dramatically. Although we still don’t understand the cause of the apneas, we know they are frequent, especially in the early neonatal period."

“This is important physiologically, because a reduced ability to respond to low oxygen and/or high carbon dioxide diminishes the ability of the infant to reinitiate breathing and break the apnea. If the apnea becomes prolonged, the oxygen levels in the blood will drop dramatically leading to cardiovascular arrest and death,” he adds.

Study Used Pump Implant to Simulate Prenatal Nicotine Exposure

The current study exposed animals to nicotine by implanting a small pump loaded with nicotine into pregnant rats, so the neonates were exposed to the nicotine in utero. This mimics the situation observed in a smoking pregnant woman. The dose of nicotine was designed to be equivalent to what the developing fetus would be exposed to if their mother smoked two packs of cigarets a day.

Various levels of oxygen reduction were tested, from 16 percent to 10 percent of air (normal air is 21 percent O2), as well as a 12 percent oxygen/5 percent CO2 level.

Developmental Switch Parallels Neurophysiological Findings

Fregosi notes that there is “mounting evidence that neurons responsible for controlling their respiratory and cardiovascular systems show a variety of abnormal anatomic and physiologic changes in neonatal animals exposed to nicotine before birth, and the developmental switch between nine and 12 days is consistent with a recent report in the Journal of Applied Physiology on a major readjustment of brainstem neurotransmitter receptor densities near day 12.”
   
Source: American Physiological Society


  Have a comment on this article? Send it




AccMed Technology Solutions at CSM 2010
Bill Cummins, MS, CCC-SLP, discusses the Cypress Therapy software from AccuMed Technology Solutions, which provides a library of documentation templates, including daily notes, weekly summaries, initial and monthly plans of progress, and discipline-specific evaluations, as well as Cypress Mobile software in which therapists enter treatment data as they work with patients, running on any handheld device using the Windows Mobile® operating system Cypress Therapy software integrates, manages, and displays information for therapists, managers, and business office staff.
[webcast archive]

 
Copyright © 2010, Valley Forge Publishing Group
2570 Boulevard of the Generals, Ste 220, Norristown, PA 19403
p. 800-983-7737 | f. 610-854-3780 | e. info@therapytimes.com
 
Web Award   APEX Award   ASBPE Award   ASHPE Award