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Catecholaminergic neurons in the brain-stem and sleep apnea in SIDS victims
Authors:Toshiko Sawaguchi   Yuri Ozawa   Patricia Franco   Hazim Kadhim   Jose Groswasser   Martine Sottiaux   Sachio Takashima   Hiroshi Nishida  Andre Kahn
Affiliation:

a Department of Legal Medicine, Tokyo Women’s Medical University School of Medicine, 8-1 Kawada-cho, Shinjuku, Tokyo 162-8666, Japan

b Department of Neonatology, Toho University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan

c Children’s Hospital Reine Fabiola, Free University of Brussels, Brussels, Belgium

d International University of Health and Welfare, Fukuoka, Japan

e Maternal and Perinatal Center, Tokyo Women’s Medical University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan

Abstract:Background: Tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) is a specific marker for catecholaminergic neurones. Some reports have demonstrated a decrease of TH in the sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) compared with controls. To further investigate this, the correlation between TH and sleep apnea was investigated here. Materials and methods: Among 27,000 infants studied prospectively to characterize their sleep–wake behavior, 38 infants died under 6 months of age. They included 26 cases of SIDS. All the infants had been recorded during one night in a pediatric sleep laboratory some 3–12 weeks before death. The frequency and the duration of sleep apnea were analyzed. The brain-stem material was collected and subjected to immunohistochemical studies for TH. The density of TH-immunoreactive neurons was measured in the nucleus hypoglossus, nervus vagus dorsalis, solitary and ambiguus and the ventrolateral medulla (VLM) in the medulla oblongata. Correlation analyses were carried out between the density of TH-immunoreactive neurons and the data from the sleep apnea studies. Results: There was no SIDS specific correlation between TH-immunoreactive neurons in the nucleus hypoglossus, nervus vagus dorsalis, solitary and ambiguus and the ventrolateral medulla in the medulla oblongata and the frequency and duration of sleep apnea. Conclusions: No significant association between the pathological data and the physiological data refers to TH-positive neurons in the medulla oblongata in SIDS victims.
Keywords:Sudden infant death syndrome   Tyrosine hydroxylase   Catecholaminergic neuron   Medulla oblongata
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