Sleep-waking patterns in hypoxic kittens

Abstract
Kittens at 10, 20, and 40 days of age were made intermittently hypoxic in 10 or 7% oxygen chambers for either 3 or 8 days. Respiration, EKG, EEG, and neck and eye movements were recorded during hypoxia. Compared to 21% oxygen controls, hypoxic kittens had fewer and shorter epochs of active sleep, and longer epochs of quiet sleep. Some hypoxic kittens exhibited slow and labored respiration during quiet sleep and transitional epochs, which reversed during active sleep. Kittens that showed most pronounced respiratory changes or died had less active sleep than kittens that compensated adequately and survived. These results suggest that active sleep may be important for stimulation of respiration during infancy. Suppression of active sleep, augmentation of quiet sleep, or other disturbances to normal sleep-waking patterns during hypoxia, may increase the risk for hypoxic respiratory depression and death.