Blood pressure increases in response to feeding in the term neonate
- 1 May 1992
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Developmental Psychobiology
- Vol. 25 (4) , 291-298
- https://doi.org/10.1002/dev.420250406
Abstract
We studied blood pressure and heart rate of 18 medically well newborn babies before, during and after feeding. Seven were breast-fed and 11 bottle-fed and all were studed between 24 and 92 hr of age. There was an increase in heart rate associated with sucking on a pacifier but no additional increase with feeding. By 30–60 min after feeding, heart rate had returned to baseline value. Blood pressure, however, did increase in response to feeding and showed a greater increase in the breast-fed group than in the bottle-fed group. Systolic blood pressure rose from 72 mmHg in the basal state to 85 mmHg during the first 3 min of feeding in the bottle-fed babies and from 73 to 99 mmHg during comparable periods in the breast-fed babies. The results for diastolic blood pressure were similar except that changes within the bottle-fed group were not statistically significant. Bottle-fed babies rose only from 42 to 47 mmHg while breast-fed babies rose from 42 to 61 mmHg from basal conditions to feeding. Blood pressure responses to feeding may have implications for susceptibility to necrotizing enterocolitis, for future blood pressure liability in adulthood and for later hypertensive disease. © John Wiley & Sons, Inc.Keywords
This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- Pharmacological blockade of blood pressure and heart rate increases following milk ingestion in 15-day-old SHR and WKY rat pupsPhysiology & Behavior, 1991
- Prevalence of “significant” hypertension in junior high school-aged children: The Children and Adolescent Blood Pressure ProgramThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1989
- Blood pressure in very low birth weight infants in the first 70 days of lifeThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1988
- Blood pressure and heart rate responses of SHR and WKY rat pups during feedingPhysiology & Behavior, 1988
- Blood pressure responses to milk ejection in the young ratPhysiology & Behavior, 1986
- Necrotizing EnterocolitisNew England Journal of Medicine, 1984
- Blood pressure survey in a population of newborn infants.BMJ, 1976
- Role of Blood Pressure in the Development of Congestive Heart FailureNew England Journal of Medicine, 1972
- Epidemiologic Assessment of the Role of Blood Pressure in StrokeJAMA, 1970
- Observations on blood pressure in newborn infants.Archives of Disease in Childhood, 1965