Sudden Infant Death Syndrome Research - SIDS, Causes, Prevention, Statistics

Sudden Infant Death Syndrome Research Today is a free monthly online journal that collates and summarizes the latest research about Sudden Infant Death Syndrome, including details on sids, causes, prevention, statistics.


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Inappropriate mediastinal baroreceptor reflex as a possible cause of sudden infant death syndrome - Is thorough burping before sleep protective?

Flaig C

Landeskrankenhaus Bludenz, Emergency Medicine, Spitalgasse 13, 6700 Bludenz, Austria.

Despite extensive research, a link between the assumed mechanisms of death and known risk factors for sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) has not yet been established. Modifiable risk factors such as prone sleeping position, nicotine exposure and thermal stress and non-avoidable risk factors like male gender and some risky socio-economic conditions could be detected, but the etiology of SIDS remains unknown. In many SIDS cases histopathological findings suggest an involvement of vital autonomic control functions and unidentified trigger factors seem to play a role. From a hypothetical point of view, a developmental sympatheticovagal imbalance of the cardiovascular reflex control could cause a predisposition for SIDS. An assumed gastroesophageal trigger impulse is possibly developed during the first weeks of life and could lead to the infant's vagal reflex death. Air swallowed during feeding escapes through the esophagus while the infant is sleeping. The temporarily bloated esophagus exerts pressure on neighboring mediastinal baroreceptors, which is potentially misinterpreted as a rise in arterial pressure. The following cardiodepressoric baroreceptor reflex could lead to arterial hypotension, bradycardia and cardiac arrest. Sleeping in prone position may create an increased thoracic pressure on mediastinal baroreceptors, causing a more pronounced vagal reflex and an increased likelihood of SIDS. Prone position in connection with soft objects in the infant's sleeping environment potentially generates an increased oculobulbar pressure, resulting in an additional cardiodepressoric condition (Aschner-Dagnini phenomenon). From the sixth month of life onwards the sympatheticovagal balance seems to have matured sufficiently to compensate the life-threatening challenges in most infants. Insufficient postprandial burping could either create another independent modifiable risk factor or present the missing link to a common trigger mechanism for SIDS. Further investigations may possibly lead to the explicit recommendation to burp all infants sufficiently and repeatedly before sleep.

Published 5 December 2006 in Med Hypotheses.
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Sudden Infant Death Syndrome Research Today Archive:

Volume 1 (2005)
  Issue 1 (September)
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  Issue 3 (November)
  Issue 4 (December)

Volume 2 (2006)
  Issue 1 (January)
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Volume 3 (2007)
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Volume 4 (2008)
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  Issue 6 (June)
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  Issue 12 (December)



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How To Understand the Causes of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS)

How To Understand the Causes of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS)