Researchers Pinpoint Reason Infants Die From SIDS

Authored by biospace.com and submitted by okietarheel

Sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) accounts for about 37% of sudden unexpected infant deaths a year in the U.S., and the cause of SIDS has remained largely unknown. On Saturday, researchers from The Children's Hospital Westmead in Sydney released a study that confirmed not only how these infants die, but why.

SIDS refers to the unexplained deaths of infants under a year old, and it usually occurs while the child is sleeping. According to Mayo Clinic, many in the medical community suspected this phenomenon could be caused by a defect in the part of the brain that controls arousal from sleep and breathing. The theory was that if the infant stopped breathing during sleep, the defect would keep the child from startling or waking up.

The Sydney researchers were able to confirm this theory by analyzing dried blood samples taken from newborns who died from SIDS and other unknown causes. Each SIDS sample was then compared with blood taken from healthy babies. They found the activity of the enzyme butyrylcholinesterase (BChE) was significantly lower in babies who died of SIDS compared to living infants and other non-SIDS infant deaths. BChE plays a major role in the brain’s arousal pathway, explaining why SIDS typically occurs during sleep.

Previously, parents were told SIDS could be prevented if they took proper precautions: laying babies on their backs, not letting them overheat and keeping all toys and blankets out of the crib were a few of the most important preventative steps. So, when SIDS still occurred, parents were left with immense guilt, wondering if they could have prevented their baby’s death.

Dr. Carmel Harrington, the lead researcher for the study, was one of these parents. Her son unexpectedly and suddenly died as an infant 29 years ago. In an interview with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC), Harrington explained what she was told about the cause of her child’s death.

"Nobody could tell me. They just said it's a tragedy. But it was a tragedy that didn't sit well with my scientific brain.”

Since then, she’s worked to find the cause of SIDS, both for herself and for the medical community as a whole. She went on to explain why this discovery is so important for parents whose babies suffered from SIDS.

"These families can now live with the knowledge that this was not their fault," she said.

In the study, the researchers wrote, “This finding represents the possibility for the identification of infants at risk for SIDS infants prior to death and opens new avenues for future research into specific interventions.”

As the cause is now known, researchers can turn their attention to a solution. In the next few years, those in the medical community who have studied SIDS will likely work on a screening test to identify babies who are at risk for SIDS and hopefully prevent it altogether.

merpderpherpburp on May 12nd, 2022 at 10:56 UTC »

Happened to a coworker of mine. Her baby was 5 months old, family over for Thanksgiving, baby in the living room on his back, bring loved on by family. She said he fell asleep for 20ish minutes and when her husband walked by noticed he was blue. Her husband was a nurse so rushed to perform CPR while they called an ambulance but the baby was already dead. The hospital found no foul play and said it was SIDs but her husband who couldn't resuscitate his son took it the hardest. What if they had checked on him sooner, there were over a dozen people over how could no one see him turning blue, etc. They have 2 other children and this was 4 years ago. I've since left that job and hope they are doing well

LoverlyRails on May 12nd, 2022 at 02:56 UTC »

According to Mayo Clinic, many in the medical community suspected this phenomenon could be caused by a defect in the part of the brain that controls arousal from sleep and breathing. The theory was that if the infant stopped breathing during sleep, the defect would keep the child from startling or waking up.

So it's a brain defect. This article says the lead researcher for this study lost her child to SIDS and how it drove her to learn why.

There's a subreddit in which people post last images of people who have died. Sometimes the ones they have lost are children. And the SIDS deaths are always incredibly sad. People will post an image of a happy smiling baby. Something like, this was Maya at 2 months old after her bath and that night she never woke up.

They talk about how they did everything right, and they got no answers- why did it happen. I hope this research helps them and brings them peace.

sean488 on May 12nd, 2022 at 02:55 UTC »

Basically the brain has not figured out how to wake itself if it forgets to breath.