Abstract: | Recent awareness of the magnitude of sudden unexplained deaths in apparently healthy infants has lead to an increased interest in those circumstances that are associated with or can elicit prolonged and serious apneic episodes. In the present studies, attention was directed toward the study of physiologic activity during sleep and feeding. Apneic episodes of varying durations occur during sleep which, in some instances, can be of sufficient length to warrant resuscitative intervention. A number of infants also reveal transient upper airway obstruction following brief periods of sleep apnea. This functional airway obstruction produces sudden and severe bradycardia. Similarly, infant feeding can induce dangerously prolonged periods of apnea and, in some infants, transient airway obstruction. Few detailed studies have been performed to identify the anatomical level or characteristics of the obstruction. Available evidence suggests that this can take the form either of muscle hypotonicity or hypertonicity. Two infants observed by means of direct laryngoscopy revealed transient failure of vocal cord abduction. These results have provided for the development of two theoretical models that can result in the sudden infant death syndrome; furthermore, continuous recordings of respiratory and cardiac activity during feeding and sleep can be extremely valuable in elucidating the mechanisms responsible for the sudden development of apneic and cyanotic episodes in infants. |