Study: Infant Hearing Tests Could Predict Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS)
Children's Hospital and Regional Medical Center in Seattle Releases Exciting Study Concerning SIDS
Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS) has long perplexed the medical community. It has left behind a landscape of grieving parents who have little answers. If only there was a way to predict which baby would succumb to this silent killer, there might be hope in preventing it. According to aStudy: Infant Hearing Tests Could Predict Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS)
Date: July 30, 2007Seattle, WAUnited States of America
The study in Early Human Development has found an interesting link. The study used medical records and hearing tests from 31 babies who had died of SIDS in the state of Rhode Island and carefully compared them with healthy babies. The SIDS babies had different test results for their right inner ears when compared to normal infants who have not died of SIDS. These results are exciting because it could lead to an easy and inexpensive way to identify infants who are at extremely high risk of dying of SIDS.
Also referred to as "crib death" and "cot death" there have been many theories as to why an infant who appears normal suddenly dies for no particular reason. It generally strikes babies from two to four months old and is more prevalent in boys than in girls. 1 in 1,000 babies across the world die from this mysterious syndrome, which makes it the number one cause of death in young babies. In the United States from 1992-1999 there were approximately 3,600 infant deaths that were deemed caused by SIDS, according to an April 2004 article in Archives of Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine.
With Sudden Infant Death Syndrome, the baby dies while sleeping with no warning or noticeable symptoms. With the "Back To Sleep" program, doctors advise parents to lay their babies down on their backs for sleep and do not recommend stomach sleeping. In addition, education and awareness have increased in regards to secondhand smoke and its dangers. There have been hypotheses from infant overheating to a malfunction in respiratory control, but none of them have been proven.
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