Doctors may be getting close to understanding SIDS, the unexplained death of an apparently healthy, less-than-one-year-old baby. astridtv1 reports.
"It's been very hopeful news, in the sense that we can now identify even more children who may be at risk for the potential for SIDS, or at least having apneas when they go to sleep at nighttime," Ngai said.
The study published in The Lancet medical journal found levels of an enzyme called BCHe were significantly lower in babies who later died of SIDS. "They looked at blood spots as part of their newborn screening campaign, and compared children who went on to die from SIDS and compared them to controls. They found that this enzyme level of butyrylcholinesterase had a reduced activity level compared to normal children," Ngai said."We definitely have to sort of validate the study and we have to do more research into it," he said.
Around 3,400 babies in the U.S. die from SIDS every year, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.Placing babies on their backs for all sleep timesHaving the baby sleep in the parent's room, but not in the adult's bed
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