Byard Roger W, Bright Fiona, Vink Robert
School of Medicine, The University of Adelaide, Level 6 Medical School North Building, Frome Road, Adelaide, SA, 5005, Australia.
Sansom Institute for Health Research, University of South Australia, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia.
Forensic Sci Med Pathol. 2018 Mar;14(1):114-116. doi: 10.1007/s12024-017-9941-y. Epub 2017 Dec 14.
The prone (face down) sleeping position is known to be associated with a significantly increased risk of sudden and unexpected death in infancy (sudden infant death syndrome or SIDS), however, the reasons for this are unclear. Suggested mechanisms have involved suffocation from occlusion of the external airways by soft bedding/pillows or from flattening of the nose with backward displacement of the tongue, rebreathing of carbon dioxide, blunting of arousal responses with decreased cardiac responses to auditory stimulation, diaphragmatic splinting or fatigue, lowering of vasomotor tone with tachycardia, nasopharyngeal bacterial overgrowth, overheating, alteration of sleep patterns, compromise of cerebral blood flow and upper airway obstruction from distortion of nasal cartilages. Recent studies have, however, shown a significant reduction in substance P in the inferior portion of the olivo-cerebellar complex in SIDS infants which is crucial for the integration of motor and sensory information for the control of head and neck movement. This deficit may explain why some infants are not able to move their faces away from potentially dangerous sleeping environments.
俯卧(脸朝下)睡眠姿势已知与婴儿期突然意外死亡(婴儿猝死综合征或SIDS)风险显著增加有关,然而,其原因尚不清楚。提出的机制包括因柔软被褥/枕头阻塞外部气道导致窒息,或因舌头向后移位使鼻子变平导致窒息、二氧化碳重复吸入、对听觉刺激的心脏反应降低导致唤醒反应迟钝、膈肌夹板固定或疲劳、心动过速导致血管运动张力降低、鼻咽部细菌过度生长、过热、睡眠模式改变、脑血流受损以及鼻软骨变形导致上呼吸道阻塞。然而,最近的研究表明,SIDS婴儿橄榄小脑复合体下部的P物质显著减少,而P物质对于整合运动和感觉信息以控制头部和颈部运动至关重要。这一缺陷可能解释了为什么一些婴儿无法将脸从潜在危险的睡眠环境中移开。