AbstractPneumogram (PG) recordings were performed in 87 very low birthweight (VLBW) asymptomatic infants just prior to hospital discharge to determine the relationships between: 1) a prior history of apnea of prematurity (AOP) and cardiorespiratory pattern; and 2) cardiorespiratory pattern at hospital discharge and postconceptional age. Apnea density (A6/D) and longest apnea were significantly greater in those with (n = 66), versus without (n = 21) a prior history of AOP (P<0.05 andP<0.01, respectively). Although PG values for the 21 VLBW infants without a prior history of AOP did not differ significantly from those of full‐term infants, for the 66 VLBW infants with a prior AOP history A6/D (P<0.01), episodes of periodic breathing (P<0.05) and longest apnea (P<0.001) were significantly greater compared with full‐term infants. Postconceptional age was significantly less in the VLBW infants with A6/D values above, compared with those within the 95th percentile for normal infants (median age, 36 and 37.5 weeks;P= 0.01). Therefore, respiratory pattern abnormalities in asymptomatic VLBW infants ready for hospital discharge are related to a prior history of AOP and may be significantly higher than in full‐term infants at the postconceptional ages at which hospital discharge now tends to
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