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Sudden Infant Death Syndrome

John L. Carroll MD1
Gerald M. Loughlin MD2
1 Assistant Professor, Department of Pediatrics, Pediatric Pulmonary Division; Director, Pediatric Sleep Laboratories; Co-Director, Infant Apnea and Home Monitoring Program, Johns Hopkins Children's Center, Baltimore, MD.
2 Associate Professor, Department of Pediatrics; Director, Pediatric Pulmonary Division; Director, Johns Hopkins Pediatric Sleep/Breathing Disorders Center; Co-Director, Infant Apnea and Home Monitoring Program, Johns Hopkins Children's Center, Baltimore, MD.

The causes of SIDS are unknown, and there are no tests that predict which infants will die of SIDS. Home monitoring, while it may prevent death in some high-risk infant populations, has not altered the overall incidence of SIDS. Studies have identified several important risk factors, such as prematurity, low birth-weight, inadequate prenatal care, maternal smoking, maternal anemia, and poor socioeconomic conditions. Other recent studies have raised important questions about child care practices, such as infant sleeping position. Still others raise equally important questions about the role of neglect or intentional injury, which now must become the subject of proper scientific investigation. The possibility that underlying metabolic defects may account for a substantial proportion of cases has been raised but requires verification. A common thread is evident: There are risk factors, such as maternal smoking and infant sleeping position, that could be subject to preventive intervention strategies.

Approximately 200 new articles are published on the topic of SIDS every year. The pediatrician must have the necessary perspective to incorporate these into the "big picture." Because the main role of the pediatrician involves support, advice, and counseling of parents of present SIDS victims and future siblings, a strong knowledge base is essential. The pediatrician also can serve as an advocate for future children by insisting

[See table in the PDF file]

on the full and proper investigation of every SIDS case. Although we will never eliminate sudden unexplained death during childhood, we can at least hope, through better diagnosis of treatable conditions and improved preventive intervention strategies, to whittle away this diagnosis of exclusion to its minimum possible incidence.




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