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Serotonin Receptor Binding and Sudden Infant Death Syndrome

(5/30/2023)

Dear Friends,

A number of articles hit the news in May 2023 regarding Serotonin Receptor Binding and Sudden Infant Death Syndrome. The news refers to a Harvard team study that was published May 25, 2023 in "Journal of Neuropathology & Experimental Neurology", Volume 82, Issue 6, June 2023, Pages 467–482. More information follows. We have received many e-mail messages asking for more information. The public has been on an information roller coaster, the result of an explosion of medical reports, each heralding a "breakthrough in SIDS research." We need to help people separate myth from fact and risk factor from cause. We will post information as it becomes available to us.

Please keep the following in mind:

- When it comes to media coverage of SIDS, we often feel a sense of frustration in being confronted with misleading headlines, announcements of so-called breakthroughs and statements taken out of context.

- Please read the articles, "Mass Media's" Role in SIDS Education, at <http://sids-network.org/media.htm>, and Clarifying Confusing Research Information.

We are currently gathering more information about this specific research and will keep you updated.

Thanks!

Chuck Mihalko
Executive Manager
SIDS Network

5/30/2023

Letter from Tom Keens, MD, to the California SIDS community.

An important research study was recently published by Robin Haynes and her colleagues at Harvard. Doctor Haynes has continued the work of Professor Hannah Kinney on brainstem neurotransmitters and neurotransmitter receptor binding sites in the brainstems of babies dying from SIDS. The reference for the paper is:

Haynes, R.<., F. Trachtenberg, R. Darnall, E.A. Haas, R.D. Goldstein, O.J. Mena, J.F. Krous, and H.C. Kinney. Altered %-HT2A/C receptor binding in the sudden infant death syndrome: Part I. Tissue=based evidence for serotonin receptor signaling abnormalities in cardiorespiratory- and arousal-related circuits. Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology, doi.org/10.1093/jnen/nlad030, 2023.

A copy of the original research paper is appended here.

The Harvard group has previously described abnormalities in the brainstems of babies dying from sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS). Their more recent work focuses on serotonin. In addition, they previously reported decreased serotonin receptor binding sites in SIDS brainstems. Neurotransmitters, like serotonin, need to bind to a receptor in order to perpetuate a neural impulse. In this study, they found decreased serotonin receptor binding sites in many areas of SIDS brainstems, but especially those which control breathing, cardiac responses to environmental challenges, and arousal from sleep. Many investigators have postulated that SIDS babies might die because they fail to arouse or wake up in response to potentially dangerous situations while asleep. This study provides neuropathologic evidence that arousal and cardiorespiratory responses are decreased or even abnormal in SIDS babies.

Further, we know that SIDS is most common at age 2-4 months, and that there are fewer deaths in the first month of life. This is different from other natural causes of infant death, which are most common near birth and decrease as the infant ages. This study found that the number of serotonin receptor binding sites was closer to normal in SIDS brainstems at birth. However, in control brainstems (not SIDS) serotonin receptor binding sites increased with age in the first 10-months of life, but not in the SIDS brainstems. This may be a partial explanation for why SIDS is less common in the first month of life.

The investigators still hold to the Triple Risk hypothesis of SIDS, which suggests that SIDS is not a single abnormality in a single physiologic system. Rather, it is an interaction between age, intrinsic difference in vulnerability, and environmental challenges. Not all babies with decreased serotonin receptor binding sites will die, especially if they are not challenged with an environmental hazard during the critical developmental window. Nevertheless, this is an important study which further supports an inability or decreased ability of SIDS babies to respond to environmental hazards during sleep.

Jacklin Kwan, a reporter for a British publication NewScientist, interviewed both Robin Haynes and me for a lay article on this research (copy here).

Thank you so much for all you do to improve SIDS services, education, and research in California.

--- Tom Keens, Chair of the California SUDS Advisory Council

tkeensatchla.usc.edu

 

 

 

 

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