Research Uncovers Clue to SIDS
Babies
who slept on their stomachs had lower levels of oxygen in their brains
By Randy Dotinga
HealthDay Reporter
THURSDAY, March 3 (HealthDay News) -- A new Australian study finds that babies
who sleep on their stomachs -- a position thought to pose a risk for SIDS --
have lower levels of oxygen in their brains than those who sleep on their
backs.
The discovery suggests that a lack
of oxygen could explain why babies in such a position are at a higher risk of
sudden infant death syndrome while sleeping: Their brains may be less able to
wake them up when they're in danger from not breathing.
The research also backs current
recommendations on the prevention of SIDS that suggest infants be put on their
backs to sleep. "For a lot of parents, it's important for them to know why
something works before they do it. If we can make this link, if we can say that
if your baby is on his stomach, he's not getting enough oxygen to his brain,
it'll help parents see why this might be true," said Dr. Rachel Moon, a
pediatrician at Children's National Medical Center who studies SIDS.
The disorder has been documented
since Biblical times, when it was called overlaying, explained study co-author
Rosemary S.C. Horne, of the Ritchie Centre for Baby Health Research at the Monash Institute of Medical Research at Monash
University in Melbourne. From the 1960s to the 1980s, the number of SIDs cases
rose because parents were encouraged to put their babies to sleep on their
stomachs, Horne said.
"This was advocated, as sick
preterm infants were shown to breath better in this position," she said.
"It was a case of changing infant care practices without proper scientific
evidence to do this. Around the world, most babies sleep on their backs and are
even kept there in devices such as cradle boards."
In the new study, the Australian
researchers sought to better understand what happens when babies sleep on their
stomachs and why they face a greater risk of not being able to rouse themselves when something goes wrong, such as when they stop
breathing for a time.
The researchers tested 17 babies at
different times during the first six months of life when they slept either on
their backs or their stomachs. For safety, the babies were studied in a
hospital "and were fully monitored throughout the study with heart rate,
breathing and oxygen saturation recorded continuously," Horne said.
The researchers found that the
oxygen levels in the brain dipped when they slept on their stomachs. This may
explain why babies who sleep on their stomachs are three times harder to arouse
from sleep as other babies, Horne said. Previous research has shown that these
babies also have lower blood pressure, although specialists have differed about
whether that's important.
"What still remains a mystery
is why are some infants more vulnerable than
others," Horne said. "When in a life-threatening situation, most
babies do not die. We are striving to understand all the processes involved so
we can identify which infants are most vulnerable."
The findings appear online Feb. 28
in the journal Pediatrics.
More information
For more about SIDS, try the U.S. National Library of Medicine.
SOURCES: Rachel Moon, M.D.,
pediatrician, Children's National Medical Center, and professor of pediatrics,
George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences, and
author, "14 Ways to Protect your Baby from SIDS," Washington D.C.;
and Rosemary S. C. Horne, Ph.D., associate professor, Monash
University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, March 2011 Pediatrics
Last Updated: March 03, 2011
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