Blood marker identified for babies at risk of SIDS hailed as
'breakthrough'
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[May 14, 2022]
By Nancy Lapid
NEW YORK (Reuters) - A team of Australian researchers have identified a
biochemical marker in the blood that could help identify newborn babies
at risk for sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS), a breakthrough they
said creates an avenue to future tragedy-preventing interventions.
In their study, babies who died of SIDS had lower levels of an enzyme
called butyrylcholinesterase (BChE) shortly after birth, the researchers
said. BChE plays a major role in the brain's arousal pathway, and low
levels would reduce a sleeping infant's ability to wake up or respond to
its environment.
The findings are game changing and not only offer hope for the future,
but answers for the past, study leader Dr. Carmel Harrington of The
Children's Hospital at Westmead in Australia said in a statement.
"An apparently healthy baby going to sleep and not waking up is every
parent's nightmare and until now there was absolutely no way of knowing
which infant would succumb," Harrington said. "But that's not the case
anymore. We have found the first marker to indicate vulnerability prior
to death."
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Using dried blood spots taken at
birth as part of a newborn screening program, Harrington's team
compared BChE levels in 26 babies who later died of SIDS, 41 infants
who died of other causes, and 655 surviving infants.
The fact that levels of the enzyme were significantly lower in the
infants who subsequently died of SIDS suggests the SIDS babies were
inherently vulnerable to dysfunction of the autonomic nervous
system, which controls unconscious and involuntary functions in the
body, the researchers said.
The Sydney Children's Hospital Network in Australia
called the discovery "a world-first breakthrough."
A failure to wake up when appropriate "has long been considered a
key component of an infant's vulnerability" to SIDS, the research
team said in The Lancet's eBio Medicine.
SIDS is the unexplained death of an apparently healthy infant while
asleep. Harrington lost her own child to SIDS 29 years ago and has
dedicated her career to researching the condition, according to the
statement.
Further research "needs to be undertaken with urgency" to determine
whether routine measurement of BChE could potentially help prevent
future SIDS deaths, the investigators said.
(Reporting by Nancy Lapid; Editing by Caroline Humer and Bill
Berkrot)
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