31
acknowledges that the person who charge of the patient at any given time, be he consultant or practitioner, is the leader of the team working for that patient-even if all the other members of the team are fellows of the Royal Society. And this position of leadership could scarcely be challenged except for one reason-that the doctor’s
provided
everyone
is in clinical
respiratory type have been observed in utero 2; and ’Thorotrast ’ injected into the amniotic sac has been identified some hours later deep in the lungs of the foetus.3 There is some evidence that these respiratory movements are more readily initiated in the early than in the late foetus.4 The healthy mature baby seems to absorb rapidly any amniptic fluid it may have inhaled. Both premature and anoxic infants, however, deal less effectively with such fluid. Anoxia may cause venous and capillary congestion which, particularly in the premature baby, readily leads to haemorrhages and oedema ; these, in turn, disorganise
calibre had been allowed to fall below what is necessary for discharging his supreme responsibility. Thus, as happens so often in New Year reflections, we are brought back to ourselves. Though it may be more congenial to try to stop a technological tide from rising, or to put back a social clock, it is probably the responses of the central nervous system and better in the end to concentrate on keeping, or setting, prevent absorption of fluid from the lungs. In fact, the oedema will add to the fluid present in the alveoli one’s own house in order. The moralists-alwaysso at this us that in the run season-remind and render the lungs still more rigid and inexpansible. busy long a man’s status and influence depend on what he is Anoxia, oedema, and atelectasis form a vicious circle. and does ; and if our profession proves itself able Secondary atelectasis is more rare than the primary and willing to give people all the help they ought to form. Leaving aside cerebral damage and congenital get from doctors, it need have no fear of social defects, it may follow the formation of hyaline tendencies or anv other threat to its future. membrane or pre-existing pneumonia. Owing to its elasticity the infant lung contains little residual air ; Atelectasis Neonatorum and this may be reabsorbed just before death, giving PREMATURITY accounts for a large proportion of rise to the appearance of atelectasis. The obvious requirements for preventing unnecesneonatal deaths, and commonly the cause of death sary deaths due to atelectasis are the avoidance of is failure of the respiration for one reason or another. prenatal or neonatal anoxia-or, failing this, rapid The death of such infants is likely to cause particular The simplest treatment is to keep the distress to the parents, since it seems that prematurity treatment. airways clear and provide oxygen and good nursing. is especially common among older women and those For many infants this is enough ; but others need who have already had an abortion or stillbirth. The more active help, and for this group DONALD and full-term infant, also, may fail to breathe after birth. LORD have devised a respirator. The first need, At birth the lungs of the mature infant are strucas always in rational treatment, is to determine older in that the those of an turally not unlike person, Neonatal respiration has been are lined lung alveoli by thin flattened epithelium and normal requirements. for there is a investigated many have a rich supply of capillaries ; years, but it cannot be said conis that our information yet satisfactory or complete. siderable amount of elastic, and not much connective, DONALD a spirometer used to and LORD describe tissue. In other words, the lungs are sufficiently in and measure normal respiration premature infants. developed to permit the easy exchange of gases as This in a essence, is, Krogh spirometer into which soon as respiration begins. The mature baby also has air active reflexes, a responsive respiratory centre, and expired passes through a simple non-return flap valve. it is filled to a known extent an electrical When fairly strong thoracic muscles. POTTERbelieves device that immaturity of the respiratory centre is probably empties the float chamber, which returns to its resting position, and the filling process begins again. never responsible for failure to breathe after birth ;. but the premature baby has a number of disadvantages The movements of the float are recorded and calibrated. A rubber oxygen mask of United States army whose degree depends on its age since conception. applied upside down, was found to fit the Firstly, the lungs are not only small in relation to pattern,face infant satisfactorily. This apparatus is useful, its size, but poorly developed ; many of the alveoli for not are only preliminary determination of normal lined by cubical epithelium, which forms a also for assessing whether a baby but relatively solid barrier between any entering air and behaviour, assisted needs the inadequate number of capillaries in the alveolar respiration, and for clarifying diagnosis for walls. Secondly, the respiratory muscles are weak, example, to determine whether the respiratory and the infant may become exhausted by the efforts difficulty is due to atelectasis or to the onset of These workers prefer a mask to a In both mature and premature demanded of it. pneumonia. babies respiratory failure- often follows atelectasis. plethysmegraph5 since it involves less disturbance of On an earlier page of this issue Dr. DONALD and an ill baby in its incubator ; and the apparatus can be made cheaply and quickly. Additional information Dr. LORD discuss some of the factors responsible for was obtained by means of radiography. The normal this state of affairs, and describe methods they are values were somewhat higher than those recorded by the infant for breath. to help struggling pursuing CROSS,5 whose figures are probably the most accurate Often asphyxia causes atelectasis, which may, in turn, lead to further asphyxia. Intra-uterine yet obtained ; for clinical reasons, DONALD and LORD could not insist on absolute resting values. Regarding anoxia can initiate respiratory efforts by the foetus which result in the inhalation of liquor amnii. This lung expansion, they observed full expansion within 30 minutes of birth. The respirator has been designed is probably not serious to the healthy full-term infant; J. Researches on Prenatal Life. in it not a be a Springfield, Ill., and, fact, may normal, though regular, 2. Barcroft, 1948. feature. In both man and animals movements of a 3. Davis, J. Amer. med. Ass. 1946, 131, 1194. M. E., Potter, E. 1.
Potter, E. L. Pathology of Chicago, 1952.
the
Fetus
and
the
Newborn.
4. Smith. C. A. 1951. 5. Cross, K. W.
The J.
Physiology
of the Newborn Infant.
Physiol. 1949, 109, 459.
Oxford,
32 in which atelectasis persists or develops secondarily. A Drinker-type apparatus did not prove wholly satisfactory for this purpose, owing to its relative functional inflexibility. Even in healthy 6 babies be respiration may very irregular,4 premature so that one of the dangers of artificial respiration is hyper ventilation with consequent alkalosis. Furthermore, newborn infants vary widely in their rate of respiration.45 These difficulties have been avoided by developing a machine that amplifies spontaneous respiratory efforts only. A photo-electric mechanism actuated by a light mirror attached to the flap of the inspiratory valves, is sensitive to the first 0-1-02 ml. of attempted respiration ; it is effective with breaths too feeble to be measured by spirometer. Either negative or positive pressure, or both, can be applied to the body. With respirators of the plethysmographic type it has proved difficult to find an efficient method of sealing the neck or face from the body-chamber. Neck seals hitherto tried may cause pistoning of the whole child or, particularly if it cries or struggles, engorgement of the blood-vessels of the head and neck. DONALD and LORD use a which can be injected around rapid-setting alginate the neck, or around the entire head and neck leaving only the face free. The mask is embedded in the alginate. They prefer to leave only the face free as pistoning is thus avoided, and should spirometry be needed readings are more likely to be accurate. The alginate can be easily broken and removed by the fingers. This method might be thought to restrict the sick and restless infant, but it appears to give satisfactory results. The alginate remains competent at pressures rather lower than - 15-30 em. water. With regard to safe pressures, DONALD and LORD have seen no harm follow the use of - 40 cm. water ; and once they used - 65 em. with no evidence of pulmonary damage. This agrees with the finding of SMITH and CHISHOLM 7that mature, and even some premature, babies could exert negative pressures of 40-50 cm. water. It would seem undesirable to use pressure of this degree for more than a short time ; and DONALD and LoRD have found that - 15-30 cm. water is sufficient. These workers follow the usual routine after the infant’s birth, and they consider using the respirator only if atelectasis persists. Endotracheal intubation is avoided, especially in premature infants, and gastric oxygen is given instead if the babyneeds assistance before it can be put in the respirator. Fortunately the newborn, and especially the premature, infant, seems to withstand pronounced oxygen lack ; moreover, the tissues are thin so that a fair amount of oxygen passes into the blood from the stomach, and the haemoglobin has a greater affinity for oxygen than that of the older baby or adult. This respirator overcomes the serious disability of weak musculature. In the feeble anoxic infant struggling for breath the diaphragm- exerts a powerful downwards pull. If the cohering or blocked alveoli do not expand, the intrathoracic subatmospheric pressure is transmitted to the chest wall. This force may be considerable.8 The soft -ribs and weak intercostal muscles are sucked This makes in, with resulting sternal - retraction.
for
cases
"
"
"
"
6. Cross, K. W., 7. Smith, C. A., 8. Hermann, L.
Oppé,
T. E. Ibid, 1952, 116, 168. Chisholm, T. C. J. Pediat. 1938, 20, 338. Arch. ges. Physiol. 1879, 20, 365.
matters worse, since the pressure
on the lungs still further obstructs the entry of air. When negative pressure is applied outside the chest, as in the respirator, sternal retraction is prevented and the subatmospheric intrathoracic pressure is applied where DONALD it is most needed-namely, to the lungs. and LORD give a mixture of 50% oxygen and 50% nitrogen. The anoxic infant needs oxygen but not carbon dioxide, which is probably already at a high concentration in its blood. On the other hand, too high a concentration of oxygen is toxic and damages9 the pulmonary epithelium. CROSS and WARNER found in -infants, as did DRIpPS and COMROE 10 in. adults, that 50-60% oxygen after a short initial depression of respiration stimulated ventilation. One obstacle to assured success is the formation of hyaline membrane. Little is known of the causes of this condition, which may supervene after a period of At necropsy the apparently normal breathing. that sometimes appearance suggests resorption of fluid has caused the deposition of granular material in an increasingly thick layer, which has blocked the alveolar ducts and obstructed the alveoli.! POTTER1 has the impression that the incidence of hyaline membrane has been reduced in the Chicago Lying-in Hospital since infants with signs of respiratory distress have been given oxygen in which the humidity is
maintained at 90-95%. Dr. DONALD and Dr. LORD describe their account of the new respirator as an interim one ; but already they can claim three cases, and perhaps a fourth, as successful results as far as saving life is concerned. They are, with some success, doing their best to treat results ; but we greatly need more information about causes, so that fewer newborn infants will have to struggle against anoxia.
Carcinogenic Aromatic Amines WE have lately commented 11 on the research which is being undertaken into the subject of bladder papilloma and carcinoma as an industrial hazard in the chemical industry. Although this danger has been recognised for nearly sixty years, and much has been done to reduce the contact of the workers with noxious chemicals, the progress towards an explanation of the fundamental causes has been slow. The dog was the only species known to be susceptible to these tumours, so that an individual experiment required up to ten years for its completion ; for a long time attempts to find a reason for the unusual localisation of the tumours in the bladder epithelium, while all other organs remained apparently
normal, failed. It was, therefore, an important step when BONSER, CLAYSON, and JULL 12 found that the urine of
contained
a
dogs treated with &bgr;-naphthylamine carcinogenic metabolite derived from
water-soluble orthohydroxyamine, 2-amino-l-naphthol, and its tumour-inducing properties were demonstrated by a new technique of implanting a pellet of the chemical suspended in wax into the mouse bladder-.13 A series of experiments has now confirmed that the metabolite is carcinogenic, whereas the parent amine this substance.
This metabolite
was a
9. Cross, K. W., Warner, P. J. Physiol. 1951, 114, 283. 10. Dripps, R. D., Comroe, J. H. Amer. J. Physiol. 1947, 149, 277. 11. Lancet, 1951, ii, 300 ; Ibid, 1952, ii, 73. 12. Bonser, G. M., Clayson, D. B., Jull, J. W. Ibid, 1951, ii, 286. 13. Jull, J. W. Brit. J. Cancer, 1951, 5, 328.