Serotonin is a neurotransmitter best known for its influence on
depression and sexual function. But it also plays less famous roles:
serotonin-releasing neurons in the brain stem regulate our body
temperature and how we breathe. Henry Krous
<http://www.healthgrades.com/directory_search/physician/profiles/dr-md-r\
eports/Dr-Henry-Krous-MD-0EFC3A81.cfm>  , a professor of pathology and
pediatrics at the University of California <http://infopath.ucsd.edu>  ,
San Diego, and his colleagues have found that a failure of this system
may be responsible for Sudden Infant Death Syndrome, or SIDS.



SIDS is diagnosed when a sleeping baby dies without obvious cause. An
infant who is sleeping face down or who is too warm is more likely to
die of  SIDS. But this new research suggests some babies may be
particularly at risk.



The researchers compared brain stem tissue from 31 infants who died from
SIDS with samples from babies who died of trauma. In the SIDS brains the
number of serotonin-responding neurons was much higher; however, protein
receptors that detect serotonin and transporters responsible for
clearing it from the synapses were both in short supply. These signs
point to disruption of the system that monitors babies' oxygen
intake and body temperature and should arouse them if, for example, a
pillow makes it difficult for them to breathe. "In a way, it's
comforting for parents," Krous says; they are not to blame. "The
defects are inherent to the baby."


It would be ideal to screen for infants susceptible to SIDS at birth
with, for example, a genetic test. But the researchers could not find a
genetic defect in the infants that accounted for these brain stem
abnormalities. Unfortunately, the method the team used to find neuronal
defects is of no used clinically, as Elliott Sherr, a neurologist at the
University of California, San Francisco, points out: "You're not
going to do a brain biopsy on every baby." But Sherr thinks that
animal models of the brain stem defect could ultimately reveal ways to
detect in a blood sample.


Happy Learning,

Yovan P. Putra

www.primastudy.com <http://www.primastudy.com/>

Expand your genius through  Total-Mind Learning  Series coaching 
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