Aim: To assess the impact of Family Nurture Intervention (FNI) on cortical function in preterm infants at term age.Methods: Family Nurture Intervention is a NICU-based intervention designed to establish emotional connection between mothers and preterm infants. Infants born at 26-34 weeks postmenstrual age (PMA) were divided into two groups, standard care (SC, N = 49) and FNI (FNI, N = 56). Infants had EEG recordings of~one hour duration with 124 lead nets between 37 and 44 weeks PMA. Coherence was measured between all pairs of electrodes in ten frequency bands. Data were summarised both within and between 12 regions during two sleep states (active, quiet).Results: Coherence levels were negatively correlated with PMA age in both groups. As compared to SC infants, FNI infants showed significantly lower levels of EEG coherence (1-18 Hz) largely within and between frontal regions.Conclusion: Coherence in FNI infants was decreased in regions where we previously found robust increases in EEG power. As coherence decreases with age, results suggest that FNI may accelerate brain maturation particularly in frontal brain regions, which have been shown in research by others to be involved in regulation of attention, cognition and emotion regulation; domains deficient in preterm infants.
Variability in blood pressure (BPV) is influenced by vascular sympathetic drive as well as autonomic control of the heart. Evidence suggests that elimination of cardiac autonomic control, as measured by heart period variability (HPV), produces a reduction in BPV at rest but an increase in BPV during challenge. We recently showed that the BPV response to psychological challenge, which principally produces cardiac parasympathetic withdrawal, was inversely related to the subject's level of cardiac control. In the current study we examined the BPV response to orthostatic tilt, a sympathetic stressor. Subjects were 22 healthy men and women who differed in cardiac control due in part to differences in aerobic capacity. HPV and BPV were measured noninvasively on a beat-to-beat basis. Tilt produced significant increases in heart rate and diastolic blood pressure and a significant decrease in high frequency HPV. As predicted, changes in BPV in response to tilt were inversely related to resting HPV. Results are interpreted in terms of a model of cardiovascular control which holds that BPV originates from feedforward effects of central control of the heart, feedback effects mediated through the baroreflexes, and direct sympathetic vascular effects.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.