SIDS Risk Linked to Lack of
Experience With Tummy-Sleeping
Babies who never sleep on their stomachs don't learn behaviors
that may lessen their risk of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS),
researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St.
Louis have found. Even so, the researchers caution that infants
should always be placed on their backs to sleep.
"The first few times babies who usually sleep on their backs
or sides shift to the prone (lying face down) position, they have
a 19-fold increased risk of sudden death," says senior author
Bradley T. Thach, M.D., a Washington University pediatrician at
St. Louis Children's Hospital. "We wondered if these babies, finding
themselves face down, fail to turn their heads to breathe easier.
If so, is that because their reflexes haven't developed far enough
or because they just don't wake up?"
Thach and his colleagues studied 38 healthy infants aged 3 to
37 weeks. Half of the babies usually slept prone or had a history
of turning prone during sleep. The other babies had never slept
prone. The study is reported in the December issue of the journal
Pediatrics.
The researchers constructed a moderately asphyxiating surface,
a comforter placed over a foam rubber mattress with a two-inch
deep circular depression that would lie directly beneath the baby's
face. When babies sleep face down on the surface, they "rebreath"
air they have exhaled, and this air can have high amounts of carbon
dioxide. A catheter taped beneath the babies' noses allowed monitoring
of carbon dioxide levels.
After four to five minutes of sleeping face down on this surface
all 38 babies awoke and attempted to get fresher air. The babies
with experience sleeping prone generally lifted and turned their
heads to either side when they sensed the air was stale, thereby
increasing their supply of oxygen-rich air. In contrast, the inexperienced
infants generally nuzzled the bedding or briefly lifted their
heads and then resumed sleeping face down. Overall, babies inexperienced
with sleeping prone spent more time fully face down than their
more experienced counterparts.
Nuzzling produced only a transient lowering of carbon dioxide
levels at the nose, while complete head turns produced larger,
sustained decreases in carbon dioxide. Head lifts also reduced
carbon dioxide levels, but the decreases lasted only as long as
the baby's head was raised.
The researchers suggest that babies learn through experience
which head movements decrease the discomfort associated with breathing
high carbon dioxide levels. Therefore, babies with experience
sleeping prone are better able to avoid conditions that may trigger
SIDS. The research results support the hypothesis, advanced by
others, that SIDS may result from insufficiently learned airway
protective responses.
The findings also indicate that good head-lifting ability while
lying prone may not be sufficient to protect a baby from SIDS.
"Many parents think that if a baby can lift its head, he or she
is okay to sleep prone, but that is a false assurance," Thach
says. "Parents and other caregivers should never place an infant
in the prone position until he or she shows the ability to spontaneously
turn all the way over. Back-sleeping should continue to be strongly
encouraged to protect against SIDS."
Reference
Source 125
December 6, 2004
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