Journal article

Oxygen saturation and heart rate in healthy term and late preterm infants with delayed cord clamping

I Lara-Cantón, S Badurdeen, J Dekker, P Davis, C Roberts, A te Pas, M Vento

Pediatric Research | Published : 2024

Abstract

Abstract: Blood oxygen in the fetus is substantially lower than in the newborn infant. In the minutes after birth, arterial oxygen saturation rises from around 50–60% to 90–95%. Initial respiratory efforts generate negative trans-thoracic pressures that drive liquid from the airways into the lung interstitium facilitating lung aeration, blood oxygenation, and pulmonary artery vasodilatation. Consequently, intra- (foramen ovale) and extra-cardiac (ductus arteriosus) shunting changes and the sequential circulation switches to a parallel pulmonary and systemic circulation. Delaying cord clamping preserves blood flow through the ascending vena cava, thus increasing right and left ventricular pre..

View full abstract

University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by European Regional Development Fund (FEDER)


Awarded by Instituto Carlos III (Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation)


Awarded by NHMRC


Awarded by National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia


Funding Acknowledgements

M.V. acknowledges RETICS funded by the PN 2018-2021 (Spain), ISCIII-Sub-Directorate General for Research Assessment and Promotion and the European Regional Development Fund (FEDER), reference RD16/0022/0001 and grant PI20/0964 from the Instituto Carlos III (Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation). I.L.-C. acknowledges CM20/0187 grant from the Instituto Carlos III (Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation). C.R. and P.D. acknowledge Investigator Grants 1175634 (to C.R.) and 1157782 (to P.D.) from NHMRC, respectively. S.B. is supported by an Australian Government Research Training Scholarship.