Birth is accompanied by a series of rapid adaptations of the cardiovascular
system, one of the most notable being a doubling of left ventricular (LV)
stroke volume. What makes this increase in LV stroke volume remarkable is t
hat before birth the heart functions at a maximal level that cannot easily
be increased with acute interventions such as volume infusion. Although cha
nges in heart rate, contractility and afterload contribute to the adaptatio
ns of birth they do not adequately explain the doubling of LV stroke volume
. Early studies obscured the role that ventricular preload plays in control
ling fetal and newborn cardiac function by focusing on these other mechanis
ms and by failing to appreciate fully the significance of ventricular const
raint in limiting heart function. Recent evidence suggests that ventricular
constraint, arising from the tissues that surround the heart (chest wall,
lungs and pericardium), limits fetal ventricular preload and thus determine
s the limits of fetal cardiac function. Relief of this constraint at birth,
with aeration of the lungs and clearance of the lung liquid associated wit
h the fetal lungs, may be the key mechanism that increases LV preload and t
hus increases LV stroke volume in the newborn.