SUDDEN INFANT DEATH SYNDROME

Last Updated on 19th May, 2022
3 minutes, 29 seconds

Description

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Context

  • A team of scientists from Australia have found that babies at risk of the mysterious Sudden Infant Death Syndrome, or SIDS, generally have low levels of an enzyme called butyrylcholinesterase (BChE) in their blood.

 

Details

  • SIDS, also known as ‘cot death’, has claimed the lives of thousands of children across the West.
  • In the United States, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimates that about 3,400 babies die suddenly and unexpectedly every year.
  • Meanwhile, the United Kingdom reports about 200 such deaths annually, according to NHS data.

 

What is Sudden Infant Death Syndrome?

  • Sudden Infant Death Syndrome refers to the sudden and unexpected death of an otherwise healthy infant under the age of one, generally while they are sleeping. Most SIDS-related deaths occur in infants between the age of 1-4 months.
  • Parents can reduce the risk of SIDS by not smoking while pregnant or after the baby is born and ensuring that the baby is placed on their back when they sleep.
  • Some health experts have said that it is associated with issues in the part of an infant’s brain that controls breathing and waking up.

What does the new study say?

  • The researchers compared dried blood samples from 655 healthy babies, 26 babies who died due to SIDS and 41 babies who died of other causes.
  • The team found that around nine of ten babies who died from SIDS had lower levels of Butyrylcholinesterase, also known as BChE enzymes than the babies in the other two groups.

 

What is the BChE enzyme responsible for?

  • These enzymes are responsible for sending out signals that make a baby wake up, turn her head, or gasp for breath.
  • It is part of the autonomic system, and controls functions like blood pressure and breathing.
  • The study refers to earlier research, which showed that animals in contact with second-hand smoke tend to exhibit lower BChE levels.
  • It notes that several other factors and changes in the first six month of an infant’s life can also contribute to low levels of these enzymes.
  • Babies have a very powerful mechanism to let us know when they are not happy.
  • Usually, if a baby is confronted with a life-threatening situation, such as difficulty breathing during sleep because they are on their tummies, they will arouse and cry out.
  • What this research shows is that some babies don’t have this same robust arousal response.

 

https://indianexpress.com/article/explained/explained-sudden-infant-death-syndrome-7924162/

 

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