Serotonin Imbalance May Be Responsible for Sudden Infant Death Syndrome

By Max Brenn
13:00, July 5th 2008
92 votes
Vote this story
Serotonin Imbalance May Be Responsible for Sudden Infant Death Syndrome

A study by Italian researchers may offer the answer to sudden infant death syndrome, the third leading cause of death among infants aged between a week and a year, killing 2,500 infants annually in the U.S. and thousands more globally.

Some previous studies have linked SIDS to smoking around infants and during pregnancy; some others have stressed the importance of putting babies to sleep on their backs, thus the SIDS dropping almost three quarters.

According to the new findings, a malfunction in the regulation of the brain chemical serotonin may be at the root of SIDS. Serotonin is a signaling chemical that has far-reaching effects in the brain and other organs, helping in the heart rate regulation, breathing, temperature regulation and more.

For the study, Cornelius Gross, PhD, and colleagues at the European Molecular Biology Laboratory near Rome analyzed mice susceptible to sudden death that had been engineered to slow the production of serotonin, a process that affected the brain stem. The brain stem is that part of the brain that is linked to the spinal cord and helps control the lungs and the heart.

Although “at first sight the mice were normal,” the researchers surprisingly found that “they suffered sporadic and unpredictable drops in heart rate and body temperature,” which caused more than half of the mice die, Dr. Gross said.

What is more surprising is the fact that “having a dysfunction in the serotonin system is somehow worse than having no serotonin at all,” as a complete block of serotonin doesn’t cause death, the study found.

This is not the first time a study links serotonin to SIDS. Two years ago, scientists at Children’s Hospital Boston and Harvard Medical School led by Dr. Hannah Kinney linked serotonin to SIDS by performing autopsies on 31 SIDS babies. Their autopsies revealed abnormalities in the SIDS infants’ brainstem, which uses serotonin to tell the body how to react to environmental changes.

The findings of the Italian study were welcomed by the Foundation for the Study of Infants Deaths. A spokesperson of the institute said the study “reinforced” the findings from 2006 but he further added that that more study needs to be done in order to find what exactly “causes the serotonin imbalance – genetic factors or environmental?”

The findings of the Italian study were published in the July 4 issue of Science.



© 2007 - 2009 - eFluxMedia
dotclear

Other News in

Obese Women at High Risk of Ovarian Cancer, Study Says

Obese Women at High Risk of Ovarian Cancer, Study Says

It is a known fact that obesity has something to do cancer. New research appearing in the journal Cancer comes to underline the idea saying that obesity can increase women’s risk of...

Early Trauma May Lead to CFS in Adulthood

Early Trauma May Lead to CFS in Adulthood

Children facing trauma may develop chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) in their adulthood, according to a study by researchers at Emory University School of Medicine and the Centers for Disease Control...

Milky Way on Collision Course With Andromeda Galaxy

Milky Way on Collision Course With Andromeda Galaxy

 Since Aristotle’s first theory on the Milky Way to present times, there’s still so much astronomers need to learn about the galaxy our Solar System lies in. Over the course of time,...

Gene Linked to Breast Cancer Spread Identified

Gene Linked to Breast Cancer Spread Identified

Researchers at Princeton University and The Cancer Institute of New Jersey have identified a gene associated with the poor prognosis of breast cancer, thus answering one of the biggest mysteries in...

National Health Spending Continues To Rise

National Health Spending Continues To Rise

According to a study published in the today’s issue of the journal Health Affairs, national health spending grew in 2007 at the lowest rate in nine years, mainly because prescription drug...

dotclear
Latest videos in Science
Death among the ruins
EU moves to fade-out old...
Body-swap Illusion Tricks...
Space beer lands in Japan
Up in the Canadian Sky, a...

dotclear
Science You are here: Science
» Science   » Health   
E-mail To A Friend Print RSS Text size: Decrease font size Increase font size
dotclear
dotclear
dotclear
Most Popular in Science
Mars Rovers – Five Years Instead Of Three Months!Mars Rovers – Five Years Instead Of Three Months!

» read full story
dotclear

Interested In This Topic?

News Alert will keep you informed. Find out more.
dotclear
Photos Gallery
dotclear
Today's Latest News
Grim mood at US tech-fests

» read full story
dotclear