COT DEATH
(SIDS) EXPERT: ABNORMAL BRAINSTEMS NOT A CAUSE OF SIDS
Newly published
US research into brainstems of cot death (SIDS) babies has
not found an abnormality in newborn babies which causes cot
death, stated Dr Jim Sprott OBE today. Rather, it has found
further proof that cot death is caused by toxic gaseous
poisoning.
Research
published in the Journal of the American Medical
Association(1) has found a brainstem abnormality in cot
death babies. Researchers are claiming that some babies are
born with this abnormality, which subsequently causes cot
death by impairing the baby's brain reflexes for waking and
breathing.
"The idea that
cot death babies are born with abnormal brainstems can be
refuted in a few sentences," said Dr Sprott. "It is already
disproved by well-established cot death epidemiology."
Statistics show
that the incidence of cot death rises with birth order: the
rate rises sharply from first babies to second babies in
families, and from second babies to third babies; and rises
again for later babies. The cot death rate is highest among
babies of solo parents.
"The rising rate
of cot death from one sibling to the next disproves the
theory that cot death is caused by a brainstem abnormality
in the newborn baby," stated Dr Sprott. "Quite obviously,
whether or not babies are born with a brainstem abnormality
is not linked to whether they are first, second or third
babies in families, or whether they were born to solo
parents."
The brain stem
abnormality which has been found by the US researchers is an
imbalance in the way the brain uses the neurotransmitter
serotonin.
"Since cot death
is caused by highly toxic nerve gases, this finding is
entirely to be expected in cot death babies," stated Dr
Sprott. "The US researchers have not found a cause of cot
death - what they have found is a neurological outcome of
the nerve gas poisoning which does cause cot death."
The researchers
have proposed screening unborn babies for the "brainstem
abnormality" in order to detect whether a baby will be at
risk of cot death.
"This screening
of babies would be a total waste of time and money," said Dr
Sprott. "Since the brainstem abnormality is not a cause of
cot death, but results from the gaseous poisoning which
causes death, screening of unborn babies would prove
absolutely nothing in respect of cot death risk."
Dr Sprott noted
that the lead author of the research, Dr Hannah Kinney, made
a parallel error in the 1990s relating to neurological cot
death research. Having found decreased kainate receptor
bindings in cot death babies,(2) Dr Kinney suggested that
cot death was linked to babies inhaling carbon dioxide.
"The idea that carbon dioxide causes cot death is disproved
by cot death epidemiology," stated Dr Sprott. "However,
because the particular gases which cause cot death attack
neurological function, Dr Kinney's finding of decreased
kainate receptor bindings in cot death babies was further
proof of the toxic gas explanation for cot death."
The nerve gases
which cause cot death are generated in mattresses (and other
bedding), and the risk of exposure to those gases rises as
mattresses are re-used from one baby to the next.(3) This
explains the rising rate of cot death from one sibling to
the next.
A
mattress-wrapping protocol for cot death prevention has been
publicised in New Zealand for eleven years. Since
mattress-wrapping began, the nationwide cot death rate has
reduced by 70% and the NZ European ethnic rate has reduced
by about 85%.(4) There has been no reported cot death on a
"wrapped mattress". By contrast, over that same period
around 810 cot deaths have occurred in New Zealand on
unwrapped mattresses (or parallel bedding situations).
Notes:
(1) Multiple
Serotonergic Brainstem Abnormalities in Sudden Infant Death
Syndrome, Journal of the American Medical Association
2006;296:2124-2132.
(2) Decreased
Kainate Receptor Binding in the Arcuate Nucleus of the
Sudden Infant Death Syndrome, Journal of Neuropathology
& Experimental Neurology, 1997;56:1253-1261.
(3) Refer:
Case-control study of sudden infant death syndrome in
Scotland, 1992-5, British Medical Journal
1997;314:1516-20; Used infant mattresses and sudden infant
death syndrome in Scotland: case-control study, British
Medical Journal 2002;325;1007-1009
(4) Source of
statistics: New Zealand Ministry of Health
Media
release issued by:
T J Sprott OBE
MSc PhD FNZIC
Consulting chemist & forensic scientist