Preliminary study links infection with E. coli to SIDS
ASSOCIATED PRESS
MILAN, Italy, April 25
Sudden Infant Death Syndrome, in which apparently healthy babies die
inexplicably in their cribs, may be linked to infection with a common
bacterium, preliminary research suggests.
Mainstream researchers have concentrated on respiratory obstruction as a
possible mechanism, without any evidence that would support such a mode of
death.
DR. PAUL GOLDWATER
study
author
RESEARCHERS
told a conference on infectious diseases Thursday that a shock-producing
byproduct of E. coli was found in the blood of all SIDS babies tested, but
in none of the infants used as a comparison.
Experts not connected with the research said the toxic infection
theory is plausible.
SIDS describes unexpected deaths that autopsies cant explain.
Despite decades of research, scientists remain mystified by crib death, the
top killer of babies aged between 1 month and 1 year in the industrialized
world.
OTHER THEORIES
Among the threats it has been tied to are sleeping position, passive
smoke exposure and genetic vulnerability. Infection is not a new idea, but
this is the first time the specific E. coli protein has been implicated.
Many researchers favor a theory that brain-stem birth defects somehow
affect arousal reflexes, so that babies dont wake up when breathing, heart
rate, blood pressure or temperature problems arise.
However, some experts believe that such brain abnormalities may not
be enough to cause death on their own.
Mainstream researchers have
concentrated on respiratory obstruction as a possible mechanism, without any
evidence that would support such a mode of death, said Dr. Paul Goldwater,
who presented his study at the European Congress of Clinical Microbiology
and Infectious Diseases in Milan.
Those researchers ignored autopsy findings that consistently show
wet, heavy lungs in SIDS babies. This is never seen in cases of
suffocation, said Goldwater, a researcher at the Womens and Childrens
Hospital in North Adelaide, Australia.
Such a lung condition is often seen in cases of infection.
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Autopsies also
consistently show small hemorrhages on the heart and lungs which is rare
in suffocation and the blood of SIDS babies is unclotted, which is
something never seen in suffocation cases, he added.
Furthermore, he said, SIDS deaths captured on medical monitors have
shown that these babies died of a shock-like process, Goldwater said.
The serum from babies who have died of SIDS is toxic to chick
embryos and mice indicating the presence of a toxin, he said.
STUDY DETAILS
In his study, Goldwater tested the blood of 68 SIDS babies and 60
other babies some of whom had died of other causes and some of whom were
alive for infections that could explain the autopsy findings in SIDS
babies.
He started with the common gut germ E. coli because varieties from
SIDS cases are more often toxic to cells grown in a lab than are varieties
found in healthy babies.
Sometimes, E. coli bacteria produce a protein called curlin, which
scientists suspect may help the bacteria compete for a foothold in the
competitive germ environment in the intestines, he noted.
The bacteria itself was found in the intestines of all the SIDS
babies, but only in 80 percent of the healthy babies. However, curlin was
detected in the bloodstream of all 68 of the SIDS babies and none of the
others, Goldwater said.
This indicated that curlin could be responsible for SIDS deaths,
given the fact that curlin causes shock in laboratory mice, Goldwater said.
Dr. Carl Hunt, director of the National Research Center for Sleep
Disorders at the U.S. National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, said
Goldwaters findings do not conflict with the popular brain-stem defect
theory.
The deaths might be triggered by infection, Hunt said, or might be
due to a combination of genetic factors, such as a brain stem defect or an
impaired immune system, and environmental factors, such as the baby sleeping
on its stomach or breathing in cigarette fumes.
The basic theory that some serious, overwhelming acutely acquired
infection is the cause of SIDS is a legitimate hypothesis, Hunt said. What
we recognize today as SIDS may have a variety of different causes in
individual infants.
The extent to which infection does play a role in SIDS and in what
percentage of SIDS it might play a role are important questions, Hunt said.
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