Sudden Infant Deaths Linked To Elevation

SIDS May Be Linked To Elevation
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By: Stephanie Pappas
Published: 05/25/2015 05:13 AM EDT on LiveScience

Babies who live at high elevations, those above 8,000 feet (2,438 meters), may face a slightly increased risk of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome, or SIDS, new research finds.

But researchers urge parents not to panic about the new findings.

"The absolute risk [of SIDS] remains very low, and … this is in no way a call to abandon residence [in] or visits to high-altitude" locations, said study researcher Dr. David Katz, a cardiologist at the University of Colorado Denver.

But the research does suggest that low oxygen levels might play a role in SIDS — and that finding could hint at the cause of tragic, unexplained infant deaths.

Safe sleep

SIDS is defined as the unexplained death of a seemingly healthy baby under the age of 1 year, typically during sleep. No one knows what causes SIDS, though some data suggests that babies who die of SIDS may have subtle brain-stem abnormalities that prevent them from rousing when their oxygen levels drop.

At high elevations, oxygen makes up 21 percent of the air, just as it does at lower elevations. But because the air pressure is lower at higher altitudes, there are fewer oxygen molecules present in every breath. Previous research shows that infants sleeping at high elevations may have hypoxia, or low oxygen levels in their blood. One Austrian study published in 1998 found a higher risk of SIDS at high elevations in babies sleeping on their stomachs compared with babies at lower elevations.

However, previous studies on SIDS and elevation were small, and they took place before the national Back to Sleep campaign, which encourages parents to put babies on their backs to sleep. Since the campaign began, in 1994, SIDS deaths have dropped from 1.2 per 1,000 live births in the United States each year to 0.43 per 1,000 live births in the country.

Elevation and SIDS

In the new study, Katz and his colleagues gathered data from birth certificates and death certificates for all births and deaths in Colorado between 1990 and 2012. The state has the highest elevation, on average, of any state in the United States, with elevations ranging from 3,315 feet (1,010 m) above sea level to 14,433 feet (4,399 m), the researchers said.

The team excluded infants with known birth defects and infants born between 1994 and 1996, when the Back to Sleep campaign was just starting; this gave the researchers two clear pre- and post-campaign groups to compare. They then separated the infants into three groups based on the elevation of the babies' homes: less than 6,000 feet (1,828 m), between 6,000 and 8,000 feet (1,828 m to 2,438 m), and above 8,000 feet (2,438 m).

The researchers controlled for a slew of demographic and social factors, including infant health and breastfeeding status, whether the baby's mother smoked during pregnancy, and parental age, race, education and socioeconomic status.

There was no difference in SIDS risk between babies living at less than 6,000 feet compared to those living at 6,000 to 8,000 feet. But above 8,000 feet, that changed.

Between 2007 and 2012, in Colorado as a whole, 0.42 infants per every 1,000 live births died of SIDS. For babies living above 8,000 feet, this number rose to 0.79 SIDS deaths per every 1,000 live births. [7 Baby Myths Debunked]

"At higher altitude, there is greater absolute risk of SIDS," Katz told Live Science. Cities at above 8,000 feet in Colorado include ski towns such as Vail, Winter Park and Breckenridge, as well as mountain towns such as Leadville, Silverton and Fairplay.

The researchers emphasized that even at high elevations, the risk of SIDS is still low. Even above 8,000 feet, a baby's chance of dying of SIDS is only 0.079 percent.

Rare risk

And the researchers found good news: The Back to Sleep campaign worked equally well at high elevations as it did at low elevations. So, putting babies on their backs to sleep, as challenging as that can sometimes be, can lower SIDS risk across the board.

"I think it's important to point out that parents can still focus on modifiable risk factors for sudden infant death syndrome, including putting infants on their back to sleep, avoiding excessive blankets or stuffed animals, and maintaining a no-smoking environment," Katz said.

"I would like parents to feel that they're empowered to take some very concrete steps to minimize risk of SIDS wherever they live," study co-author Dr. Susan Niermeyer, a professor of pediatrics at the University of Colorado School of Medicine, told Live Science. Breastfeeding and sleeping in the same room as an infant can also reduce SIDS risk, she said.

If their babies object to back-sleeping, parents can be reassured that once a baby is strong enough to roll onto his or her own stomach, parents don't need to keep flipping the baby back over all night.

"If they're able to turn over, they're probably going to have the motor development to get themselves out of a situation where they have an obstructed airway," Niermeyer said.

She did recommend that parents take caution in traveling to high elevations during the first month or two of an infant's life, but not because of SIDS. Just like adults, she said, babies can come down with altitude sickness because of the lower density of oxygen in thin mountain air.

The researchers emphasized that their study was observational, so researchers can't be sure why elevation and SIDS appear to be linked. "I'm going to resist the urge to speculate," Katz said.

But the hypoxia of high elevation is a useful way for researchers to explore the potential causes of SIDS in experimental or animal studies, Niermeyer said. It's possible that lower oxygen levels affect the prenatal development of the nervous and respiratory systems, or that there are effects after birth, she said.

The researchers published their findings today (May 25) in the journal Pediatrics.

Follow Stephanie Pappas on Twitter and Google+. Follow us @livescience, Facebook & Google+. Original article on Live Science.

Copyright 2015 LiveScience, a Purch company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Before You Go

10 Health Findings From 2014 Every Parent Should Know
The National Preterm Rate Hit A 17-Year Low(01 of10)
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According to new national figures released in November, the preterm birth rate in the United States dropped for a seventh consecutive year, to a 17-year low of 11.4 percent of all births in 2013. (Though the report was released in 2014, the figures are for the previous year.)

Experts with the March of Dimes, which released the report, characterized the results as promising, up to a point, saying there is still much work to be done at a public health level. The report emphasizes that while many risk factors for preterm birth are unknown or outside of parents' control, efforts to change modifiable risk factors, such as smoking during pregnancy, have made a measurable difference in outcomes.
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'Bed Sharing,' Sleep Objects May Pose Risks To Babies(02 of10)
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A study published in the journal Pediatrics in July, which investigated the factors linked to sleep related deaths in babies, found that "bed-sharing" (i.e., an infant sleeping on the same surface as another person or pet) was the top risk factor for those age 4 months or younger. In older babies -- those between 4 months and 1 year -- rolling onto objects in the sleep environment, such as a blanket or pillow, was the top risk factor linked to death. It is important to note, however, that the study looked only at correlations; it did not establish cause and effect. (credit:Getty)
Many Babies Sleep In Unsafe Conditions(03 of10)
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Despite known concerns over the safety of objects in the sleep environment (see finding number 4 in this list), more than half of parents in the U.S. put their babies to bed with blankets or other loose bedding, according to a government report issued in December.

As Reuters' Andrew Seaman reported, the percent of parents who put their infants to sleep with loose bedding has dropped since the 1990s. And those who have not adopted the American Academy of Pediatrics' guidelines may be confused by magazine and catalogue images depicting babies in cribs with unnecessary -- and potentially unsafe -- plush blankets and pillows.
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A small but startling study published in October, which focused on one Oregon hospital, found that more than 90 percent of moms, dads or caregivers made at least one important error in how they installed their newborn's car seat, or how they positioned the baby within the seat itself when leaving the hospital after birth. The researchers found an average of 4.2 "misuses" per family, while 50 percent of the families who participated in the study made five or more mistakes. Though it was impossible for the researchers to quantify the effect those errors might have, they said the findings clearly highlight the need for improved resources enabling parents to keep their children safe in the car. (credit:Getty)
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Every eight minutes, a child under the age of 6 experiences a medication error when not in the doctor's office or hospital, an October study found. Fortunately, the majority of the errors were not life-threatening, though they were widespread, affecting more than 200,000 children in the United States annually. The rates of errors were highest among children age 1 and younger, suggesting new parents may be particularly susceptible to making medication-related mistakes. (credit:Getty)
Serious Reactions To Vaccines Are Rare(06 of10)
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A review released by researchers with the RAND Corporation in July added to the substantial body of evidence supporting the safety of vaccines, finding that serious adverse reactions to 11 common vaccines generally given to children under the age of 6 are rare. (It also found no link between those vaccines and increased risk of Autism Spectrum Disorders.)

In an editorial accompanying the report, Dr. Carrie Byington of the University of Utah's Department of Pediatrics, wrote that the findings "should be reassuring to parents of young children and to the clinicians who care for them."
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Reading Aloud Is Critical(07 of10)
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In June, the American Academy of Pediatrics issued its first-ever statement on the promotion of childhood literacy, urging pediatricians to speak with parents about the importance of reading aloud to their kids at visits, just as they would discuss important medical and emotional concerns. The benefits of reading together, the AAP emphasized, go beyond literacy promotion -- reading to children helps nurture them emotionally and strengthens familial bonds. (credit:Getty)
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In August, the American Academy of Pediatrics took steps to emphasize the critically important role that sleep plays in teenagers' overall health, pushing for middle schools and high schools to start no earlier than 8:30 a.m. in order to help reduce widespread sleep deprivation and encourage tweens and teens to get the 8.5 to 9.5 hours of nightly sleep recommended for them. (As HuffPost's Rebecca Klein reported, roughly 40 percent of high schools in the U.S. currently start before 8 a.m.) (credit:Getty)

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