Researchers say the findings are a game-changer.
– A medical research breakthrough might have just solved the mystery of sudden infant death syndrome .
The study found that BChE levels at birth were significantly lower in babies who later died of SIDS when compared to BChE levels of infants who died of other causes and of living babies.
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New study may have identified cause of SIDS, or sudden infant death syndromeA new study found that babies who died from SIDS had lower levels of the enzyme butyrylcholinesterase than living babies.
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New study may have identified cause of SIDS, or sudden infant death syndromeA new study found that babies who died from SIDS had lower levels of the enzyme butyrylcholinesterase than living babies.
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New study may have identified cause of SIDS, or sudden infant death syndromeA new study found that babies who died from SIDS had lower levels of the enzyme butyrylcholinesterase than living babies.
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SIDS research identifies biomarker in victims of sudden infant death syndromeThe researcher who led the study, Dr. Carmel Harrington, an honorary research fellow at the Children's Hospital at Westmead in Australia, lost her own child to SIDS 29 years ago, according to the Sydney Children's Hospitals Network.
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Groundbreaking new study finds possible explanation for SIDSA medical research breakthrough might have just solved the mystery of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS).
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Study identifies potential biomarker for SIDS, but a test for it is a long way offAustralian researchers say they've identified one potential biomarker for sudden infant death syndrome, known as SIDS, but experts caution that it's just one piece of the puzzle.
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