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

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Sudden infant death syndrome: rare mutation in the serotonin system FEV gene.

Rand CM, Berry-Kravis EM, Zhou L, Fan W, Weese-Mayer DE

Department of Pediatrics, Rush Children's Hospital at Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, Illinois 60612, USA.

Recent studies have identified abnormalities in the development and function of medullary serotonin (5-HT) pathways in postmortem brain from sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) cases, suggesting 5-HT-mediated dysregulation of the autonomic nervous system (ANS) in SIDS. The human fifth Ewing variant (FEV) gene is specifically expressed in central 5-HT neurons in the brain, with a predicted role in specification and maintenance of serotonergic neuronal phenotype. We hypothesized that variations of FEV may underlie abnormalities of the 5-HT system in SIDS cases and thus may be associated with SIDS risk. To elucidate the relationship between variation in FEV and SIDS, DNA was prepared from 96 African American and Caucasian SIDS cases and 96 gender- and ethnicity-matched controls. Standard sequencing and analysis of FEV revealed a heterozygous insertion mutation (IVS-191_190insA) upstream of the 5' exon 3 splice site occurring more frequently in SIDS cases (6/96) compared with controls (0/96; p = 0.01) and in the overall African American group (6/98) compared with the Caucasian group (0/94; p = 0.03). Identification of a variation in a gene responsible for 5-HT neuronal development, exclusively in a subset of African American SIDS cases in this cohort, may help explain both the observed abnormalities of this system in some SIDS cases and the ethnic disparity observed in SIDS.

Published 16 August 2007 in Pediatr Res, 62(2): 180-2.
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Sudden Infant Death Syndrome Research Today Archive:

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Volume 2 (2006)
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Sudden Infant Death Syndrome Books

Crib Death: The Sudden Infant Death Syndrome

Crib Death: The Sudden Infant Death Syndrome