Home Search SiteMap Contact Us Forum Videos Store Physician Board

Children's Health Newborns and Toddlers

A Step Closer to Understanding SIDS


Author:

Karen Barrow

Medically Reviewed On: March 14, 2007

There may be some new clues into understanding a mysterious cause of death that affects the youngest and most helpless among us. Researchers from Children’s Hospital Boston have discovered a brain abnormality that may make some infants more prone to sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS).

SIDS is the leading cause of death of infants in America, affecting more than 2,000 babies every year. While the cause for the most part had not been understood, experts believed that SIDS, which strikes babies as they sleep, is tied to breathing difficulties that leads to a baby suffocating during the night.

It is for that reason, that the Centers for Disease Control recommends that a baby under the age of one always be put to sleep on his or her back on a firm mattress, cradle, etc, without fluffy pillows or stuffed animals that could possibly fall on a baby’s face.

These preventative measures have helped to lower the rate of SIDS by more than 60 percent between the years of 1980 and 2000, but researchers still never understood why SIDS affects some children.

However, in a review of autopsies from infants that died of SIDS between 1997 and 2005, researchers have found that these babies all had a commonality. Compared to their peers, those who died from SIDS tended to have an abnormality in their brain stem, in cells that make serotonin, a chemical that helps nerve cells communicate with each other. The study was published in the Journal of the American Medical Association.

It is believed that serotonin helps to coordinate breathing, blood pressure and temperature during sleep. When a baby sleeps face down or with his or her face covered by a blanket or pillow, they are more likely to re-inhale the carbon dioxide that they just exhaled, not fresh, oxygenated air. “A normal baby will wake up, turn his or her head and start breathing faster when carbon dioxide levels rise,” said Dr. Hannah Kinney, study author in a press release. However, in a child with abnormal serotonin levels, his body may not react at all, the researchers theorize. In fact, 65 percent of the children in the study who died of SIDS were found sleeping on their side or stomach.

These abnormalities begin to develop in the womb, said Kinney, and may be caused by smoking or alcohol use by the mother while she is pregnant. The findings also explain why SIDS tends to affect children under six months of age, a time when their body is still developing to function independently outside of the womb. So, in an older child various mechanisms may be able to monitor breathing during sleep, but a baby may rely on this section of the brain stem.

“We think that these control systems reach full maturity only towards the end of the first year of life,” said Kinney.

Kinney hopes that her work will lead to the development of screening tests to identify those babies at risk for SIDS. She also believes that a treatment to protect children with this abnormality is a possibility.

“We provide strong evidence that SIDS is a biological problem, and that the brainstem serotonin system isn a good place to focus continued research efforts,” said Kinney.

CONDITIONS
Acne
ADHD
Alopecia (Hair Loss)
ALS
Alzheimer's Disease
Amblyopia (Lazy Eye)
Anemia
Angina
Ankle Injuries
Aortic Stenosis
Arthritis-General
Asthma
Athlete's Foot
Autism
Back Pain
Bell's Palsy
Bipolar Disorder
Bladder Control
BPH/Enlarged
Prostate

Breast Cancer
Bronchitis
Bruxism
Bunions
Calluses
Cancer Pain
Carpal Tunnel Syndrome
Cataracts
Cerebral Palsy
Chest Pain
Chlamydia/NGU
Chronic Cough
Chronic Pain
Colon Cancer
Color Vision Deficiency
Common Cold
Congestive Heart Failure
Corns
Cystic Fibrosis
Dementia
Depression
Dermatitis (Eczema)
Diabetes
Endocarditis
Epilepsy/Seizures
Erectile Dysfunction
Female Sexual Dysfunction
Fibromyalgia
Genital Herpes
Genital Warts
Glaucoma
Gout
Headache
Heart Attack
Heart Disease
Heel Pain
Hematuria
Hepatitis
High Cholesterol
HIV & AIDS
Hypertension (High Blood Pressure)
Incontinence
Ingrown Toenails
Insomnia
Interstitial Cystitis
Jet Lag
Kidney Cancer
Kidney Stones
Leukemia
Lung Cancer
Lupus
Lyme Disease
Macular Degeneration
Menopause
Migraine
Moles (Nevi)
Multiple Sclerosis
Neuropathy
Newborn Skin
Obstructive Sleep
Apnea (OSA)

Osteoarthritis
Osteoporosis
Overactive Bladder
Parkinson's Disease
Pelvic Inflammatory
Disease (PID)

Pharyngitis (Sore Throat)
Plantar Warts
PMS
Premature Ejaculation
Prostate Cancer
Psoriasis
Rash
Refractive Errors & Vision
Running Injuries
Shift Work & Sleep
Sinusitis
Skin Cancer
Sleep Stages
Stroke
Tear Duct Obstruction
Thyroid Cancer
Urinary Incontinence
Urinary Tract
Infection (UTI)

Vertigo
Yeast Infection
HEALTH & WELLNESS
Alcohol Abuse
Contraception
Meditation
Narcotic Abuse
Nutrition
Obesity/Overweight
Pregnancy & Nutrition
Smoking
Stress