We examined developmental changes in breathing pattern and the ventilatory
response to hypoxia (7.4% O-2) in unanesthetized Swiss CD-1 mice ranging in
age from postnatal day 0 to 42 (P-0-P-42) using head-out plethysmography.
The breathing pattern of P-0 mice was unstable. Apneas were frequent at P-0
(occupying 29 +/- 6% of total time) but rare by P-3 (5 +/- 2% of total tim
e). Tidal volume increased in proportion to body mass (similar to 10-13 ml/
kg), but increases in respiratory frequency (f) (55 +/- 7, 130 +/- 13, and
207 +/- 20 cycles/min for P-0, P-3, and P-42, respectively) were responsibl
e for developmental increases in minute ventilation (690 +/- 90, 1,530 +/-
250, and 2,170 +/- 430 ml.min(-1).kg(-1) for P-0, P-3, and P-42, respective
ly). Between P-0 and P-3, increases in f were mediated by reductions in apn
ea and inspiratory and expiratory times; beyond P-3, increases were due to
reductions in expiratory time. Mice of all ages showed a biphasic hypoxic v
entilatory response, which differed in two respects from the response typic
al of most mammals. First, the initial hyperpnea, which was greatest in mat
ure animals, decreased developmentally from a maximum, relative to control,
of 2.58 +/- 0.29 in P-0 mice to 1.32 +/- 0.09 in P-42 mice. Second, wherea
s ventilation typically falls to or below control in most neonatal mammals,
ventilation remained elevated relative to control throughout the hypoxic e
xposure in P-0 (1.73 +/- 0.31), P-3 (1.64 +/- 0.29), and P-9 (1.34 +/- 0.17
) mice but not in P-19 or P-42 mice.