Literature DB >> 11245208

Medullary serotonergic network deficiency in the sudden infant death syndrome: review of a 15-year study of a single dataset.

H C Kinney1, J J Filiano, W F White.   

Abstract

The sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) is the leading cause of postneonatal infant mortality in the United States today, despite a dramatic 38% decrease in incidence due to a national risk reduction campaign advocating the supine sleep position. Our research in SIDS brainstems, beginning in 1985 and involving a single, large dataset, has become increasingly focused upon a specific neurotransmitter (serotonin) and specific territories (ventral medulla and regions of the medullary reticular formation that contain secrotonergic neurons). Based on this research, we propose that SIDS, or a subset of SIDS, is due to a developmental abnormality in a medullary network composed of (at least in part) rhombic lip-derived, serotonergic neurons, including in the caudal raphé and arcuate nucleus (putative human homologue of the cat respiratory chemosensitive fields); and this abnormality results in a failure of protective responses to life-threatening stressors (e.g. asphyxia, hypoxia, hypercapnia) during sleep as the infant passes through a critical period in homeostatic control. We call this the medullary serotonergic network deficiency hypothesis. We review the triple-risk model for SIDS, the development of the dataset using tissue autoradiography for analyzing neurotransmitter receptor binding; age-dependent baseline neurochemical findings in the human brainstem during early life; the evidence for serotonergic, rhombic lip, and ventral medullary deficits in at least some SIDS victim; possible mechanisms of sudden infant death related to these deficits; and potential causes of the deficits in the medullary serotonergic network in SIDS victims. We conclude with a summary of future directions in SIDS brainstem research.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11245208     DOI: 10.1093/jnen/60.3.228

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neuropathol Exp Neurol        ISSN: 0022-3069            Impact factor:   3.685


  56 in total

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2.  5HT1A receptors inhibit glutamate inputs to cardiac vagal neurons post-hypoxia/hypercapnia.

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3.  Comparative epidemiology of sudden infant death syndrome and sudden intrauterine unexplained death.

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5.  Perinatal exposure to nicotine causes deficits associated with a loss of nicotinic receptor function.

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6.  Tragic and sudden death. Potential and proven mechanisms causing sudden infant death syndrome.

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8.  5-HT2A receptors are concentrated in regions of the human infant medulla involved in respiratory and autonomic control.

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9.  5-HT2 receptors modulate excitatory neurotransmission to cardiac vagal neurons within the nucleus ambiguus evoked during and after hypoxia.

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Review 10.  Pathophysiology of sleep apnea.

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