ABSTRACT
Oral breathing is an important defense mechanism, yet its prevalence and relationship
to behavioral activities have not been studied in preterm infants. We tested the hypothesis
that oral breathing is rare in these infants and likely to be restricted to periods
of body movements. Ten healthy preterm infants (birthweight 1300 ± 100 g [SE]; gestational
age 29 ± 1 weeks; postnatal age 36 ± 7 days) were studied. Ventilation was measured
with a nosepiece and screen flowmeter. Oral breathing was detected with a carbon dioxide
sampler at the mouth. Movements were classified according to intensity into type I
(localized, minor signal distortion) and type II (generalized, moderate signal distortion).
Oral breathing was present 10% of the time, with a mean duration of 27 ± 3 seconds.
Of 104 episodes of oral breathing, 13 (13%) occurred during type I movement, 89 (86%;
p <0.01) during type II, and 2 (2%) in the absence of movement. The delay from beginning
of movements to the beginning of oral breathing was 20 ± 3 seconds. Nasal minute ventilation
decreased from 0.203 ± 0.013 L·min-1·kg-1 during movements in the absence of oral breathing to 0.167 ± 0.013 L·min-1kg-1 during movements plus oral breathing (p = 0.017). In 496 type I and II movements, the prevalence of oral breathing was 21
of 165 (13%) in quiet sleep, 37 of 194 (19%) in rapid eye movement sleep, 6 of 12
(50%) in transitional sleep, and 44 of 125 (35%) in indeterminate sleep (p <0.01). These findings suggest that: (1) the prevalence of oral breathing in preterm
infants is low, occupying about 10% of the total breathing time; (2) oral breathing
occurs almost exclusively during movements (98%), primarily type II; (3) oral breathing
is associated with a decrease in nasal breathing, indicating a switch from nasal to
mouth breathing; and (4) oral breathing is more frequent in transitional and indeterminate
sleep.
Keywords
Oral breathing - preterm infants - body movements - sleep