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Monitoring fetal maturation—objectives, techniques and indices of autonomic function.

Authors :
Dirk Hoyer
Jan Żebrowski
Dirk Cysarz
Hernâni Gonçalves
Adelina Pytlik
Célia Amorim-Costa
João Bernardes
Diogo Ayres-de-Campos
Otto W Witte
Ekkehard Schleußner
Lisa Stroux
Christopher Redman
Antoniya Georgieva
Stephen Payne
Gari Clifford
Maria G Signorini
Giovanni Magenes
Fernando Andreotti
Hagen Malberg
Sebastian Zaunseder
Source :
Physiological Measurement; May2017, Vol. 38 Issue 5, p1-1, 1p
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Monitoring the fetal behavior does not only have implications for acute care but also for identifying developmental disturbances that burden the entire later life. The concept, of ‘fetal programming’, also known as ‘developmental origins of adult disease hypothesis’, e.g. applies for cardiovascular, metabolic, hyperkinetic, cognitive disorders. Since the autonomic nervous system is involved in all of those systems, cardiac autonomic control may provide relevant functional diagnostic and prognostic information. The fetal heart rate patterns (HRP) are one of the few functional signals in the prenatal period that relate to autonomic control and, therefore, is predestinated for its evaluation. The development of sensitive markers of fetal maturation and its disturbances requires the consideration of physiological fundamentals, recording technology and HRP parameters of autonomic control. Based on the ESGCO2016 special session on monitoring the fetal maturation we herein report the most recent results on: (i) functional fetal autonomic brain age score (fABAS), Recurrence Quantitative Analysis and Binary Symbolic Dynamics of complex HRP resolve specific maturation periods, (ii) magnetocardiography (MCG) based fABAS was validated for cardiotocography (CTG), (iii) 30 min recordings are sufficient for obtaining episodes of high variability, important for intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) detection in handheld Doppler, (iv) novel parameters from PRSA to identify Intra IUGR fetuses, (v) evaluation of fetal electrocardiographic (ECG) recordings, (vi) correlation between maternal and fetal HRV is disturbed in pre-eclampsia. The reported novel developments significantly extend the possibilities for the established CTG methodology. Novel HRP indices improve the accuracy of assessment due to their more appropriate consideration of complex autonomic processes across the recording technologies (CTG, handheld Doppler, MCG, ECG). The ultimate objective is their dissemination into routine practice and studies of fetal developmental disturbances with implications for programming of adult diseases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09673334
Volume :
38
Issue :
5
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Physiological Measurement
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
122778816
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/1361-6579/aa5fca