8 research outputs found
Crib death: Further support for the concept of fatal cardiac electrical instability as the final common pathway
This work intends to be a review of the current status of knowledge on the cardiac conduction system in the crib death as well as remaining challenges, including reflections upon authors' personal works as well as many studies by others. The cardiac conduction system findings of resorptive degeneration, His bundle dispersion, Mahaim fibers, cartilaginous meta-hyperplasia, persistent fetal dispersion, left sided His bundle, hemorrhage of the atrio-ventricular junction, septation of the bifurcation, atrio-ventricular node dispersion, sinus node hypoplasia, Zahn node, His bundle hypoplasia, atrio-ventricular node and His bundle dualism are hereby discussed by the authors. The cardiac hypotheses postulating that crib death could be due to lethal cardiac arrhythmias or heart block were considered of great interest in the 1970s. After a general abandon of the conduction studies in crib death, the cardiac concept of crib death is gathering a renewed interest, as well as the occurrence of infantile junctional tachycardia. Both the morphological and functional derangement underlying crib death remain poorly understood, assuring that it remains to be a major medical and social problem. Despite the non-specificity of most of the cardiac conduction findings in crib death, we believe that they, in association with altered neurovegetative stimuli, could underlie potentially malignant arrhythmias, providing a morphologic support for the cardiac concept of crib death
Maternal smoking and sudden infant death syndrome: epidemiological study related to pathology
Various risk factors have been postulated to be related to sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS). Despite its reduction, thanks to the "Back to Sleep" campaign, SIDS is still a major cause of infant mortality in the first year of life. The purpose of this study was to correlate the different risk factors with the autopsy results and thus to determine if one or more of these variables is really specific for SIDS. We collected 128 sudden infant death victims with clinical diagnosis of SIDS and performed a complete autopsy with in-depth histology on serial sections, particularly of the brainstem, in accordance with our necropsy protocol. Histopathologic and immunohistochemical examination of the central autonomic nervous system revealed, in 78 cases of the SIDS group, the following anomalies: hypodevelopment of the arcuate nucleus, somatostatin positive hypoglossus nucleus, tyrosine hydroxylase negativity in the locus coeruleus, gliosis, and hypoplasia of the hypoglossus nucleus. A significant relation was found between maternal smoke and brainstem alterations
