New Genetic Link Found to Crib Deaths
A collection of genes involved in early
development may help explain why black babies are more at risk
of sudden infant death syndrome than other U.S. groups, researchers
said.
The gene mutations may also help
explain why thousands of U.S. infants still succumb each year
to SIDS, also known as crib death or cot death, despite education
campaigns that have cut the rate in half, the researchers said.
Dr. Debra Weese-Mayer, a professor
of pediatrics at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago, said
the finding does not fully explain the unexpected deaths of 3,000
U.S. infants a year, but helps explain some of the underlying
biology.
"For years everyone said SIDS was
a mystery, but to me it is a puzzle and each of our studies fits
in another piece," Weese-Mayer said in a telephone interview.
"This is one more critical piece
of information that tells us we are on the right path."
Writing in the September issue
of Pediatric Research, Weese-Mayer and colleagues at the University
of Pittsburgh and elsewhere said they compared genetic material
from 92 SIDS cases to that of 92 healthy one-year-olds.
They looked specifically at genes
involved in the development of the autonomic nervous system, which
controls breathing, heartbeat and other involuntary functions.
"If you have dysregulation of the
autonomic nervous system, possibly in a stressful situation you
don't have resiliency," she said. Heart rate and breathing may
not be able to adapt quickly and may simply shut down -- which
is what happens to SIDS babies.
SAME MUTATION
The researchers found 11 different
mutations in 14 of the 92 SIDS cases but only one mutation --
the same one -- in two of the 92 healthy babies.
"The curiosity is that 71 percent
of the SIDS cases that had the mutation were African-American
and both controls (healthy babies that had it) were African-American,"
she said.
"Knowing that the SIDS incidence
is significantly higher in African-Americans gives strong support
for the possibility of a genetic basis."
Other researchers have found different
genes that may be involved in SIDS.
In July a team at the Translational
Genomics Research Institute in Phoenix, Arizona, found a new disorder
in Amish families from Pennsylvania that causes sudden infant
death and sometimes malformation of the genitals.
In 2000 and 2001 researchers in
the United States and Japan found a role for the serotonin transporter
gene promoter in the brainstems of SIDS victims.
While SIDS is a general term for
unexplained infant deaths, doctors suspect a variety of causes.
U.S. and British campaigns to teach parents and caretakers to
have babies sleep on their backs cut SIDS deaths in half, but
did not eradicate them.
"We have had too many parents who
came to us and said 'look, we did everything right -- we got the
best prenatal care, no one smoked anywhere near the baby, we never
put her down on her tummy and still she died,"' Weese-Mayer said.
"That led us to say there has to
be a genetic basis."
The tissue from the SIDS babies
was donated anonymously, so Weese-Mayer says she cannot tell if
the gene mutations her team found run in families. She hopes the
government might sponsor a large study to see how common the genetic
mutations are in the population as a whole.
That will help determine whether
the mutations actually cause SIDS, she said.
Reference
Source 89
August 20, 2004
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