Normal Newborn Heart Rate in the First Five Minutes of Life Assessed by Dry-Electrode Electrocardiography. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • BACKGROUND: There is limited evidence regarding the heart rate (HR) during the first minutes of life. Nonetheless, resuscitative actions within the first minute are partly guided by different HR levels. The advent of an electrocardiographic (ECG) HR sensor with early HR detection has provided the opportunity to study changes immediately following delivery. OBJECTIVE: The objectives were to determine immediately following delivery: (i) the time to achievement of reliable ECG signals using dry electrodes, (ii) changes in HR, and (iii) the influence of the onset of breathing and cord clamping on the HR. METHODS: Healthy term neonates were randomly included between July and October 2013. The HR was recorded by the ECG sensor, placed over the abdomen immediately after birth. RESULTS: Fifty-five newborns were included. The median time from birth to placement of the HR sensor was 3 s (quartiles: 2 and 5), and the median time to the start of breathing was 6 s (quartiles: 2 and 15). The HR was around 120 beats/min (bpm) in the first seconds of life. As determined via breakpoint analysis, the HR increased by 1 beat in the first 40 s to 149 ± 33 bpm, followed by a moderate increase until 130 s and stabilization thereafter. After the onset of breathing, the HR decreased for 10 s and then increased. Minimal HR changes were observed after cord clamping. CONCLUSION: A dry-electrode ECG sensor detected reliable ECG signals almost immediately after birth. The normal HR increased significantly in spontaneously breathing infants during the first minute, influenced by the onset of breathing. Delayed cord clamping had a minimal impact on the HR, likely reflecting an earlier onset of breathing.

publication date

  • June 2, 2016

Research

keywords

  • Heart Rate
  • Respiration

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 84988355102

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1159/000445930

PubMed ID

  • 27250761

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 110

issue

  • 3