Percutaneous Respiration in the Newborn Infant

Abstract
Percutaneous respiration was studied in 32 newborn infants between 25 and 41 weeks gestation, using a closed skin cell attached to the abdomen. Gas exchange rates in the first few days of life were 6–11 times faster in infants below 30 weeks gestation than in term infants (mean O2 absorption 25.0 vs. 206.5 ml/m2/h, and CO2 excretion 26.0 vs. 294.6 ml/m2/h), but rates were similar by 3 weeks of age. Increasing the ambient oxygen concentration resulted in a non-linear increase in oxygen absorption, particularly in the most immature infants. Below 30 weeks gestation, O2 absorption increased from a mean of 206.5 ml/m2/h in air, to 357.2 ml/m2/h in 40% oxygen and 573.5 ml/m2/h in 90% oxygen. We estimate that an infant below 30 weeks gestation, nursed naked in 90% oxygen, would obtain up to 20 % of resting oxygen requirements percutaneously.