Division of General Medicine, Center for Preventive Medicine and Digital Health Baden- Württemberg (CPD-BW), University Medicine Mannheim, Heidelberg University, Mannheim, Germany.
Department of General Pediatrics, Neonatology and Pediatric Cardiology, University Hospital Düsseldorf, Heinrich-Heine-University, Düsseldorf, Germany.
Hum Nat. 2024 Jun;35(2):153-196. doi: 10.1007/s12110-024-09474-6. Epub 2024 Jul 29.
Sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) has been mainly described from a risk perspective, with a focus on endogenous, exogenous, and temporal risk factors that can interact to facilitate lethal outcomes. Here we discuss the limitations that this risk-based paradigm may have, using two of the major risk factors for SIDS, prone sleep position and bed-sharing, as examples. Based on a multipronged theoretical model encompassing evolutionary theory, developmental biology, and cultural mismatch theory, we conceptualize the vulnerability to SIDS as an imbalance between current physiologic-regulatory demands and current protective abilities on the part of the infant. From this understanding, SIDS appears as a developmental condition in which competencies relevant to self-protection fail to develop appropriately in the future victims. Since all of the protective resources in question are bound to emerge during normal infant development, we contend that SIDS may reflect an evolutionary mismatch situation-a constellation in which certain modern developmental influences may overextend the child's adaptive (evolutionary) repertoire. We thus argue that SIDS may be better understood if the focus on risk factors is complemented by a deeper appreciation of the protective resources that human infants acquire during their normal development. We extensively analyze this evolutionary-developmental theory against the body of epidemiological and experimental evidence in SIDS research and thereby also address the as-of-yet unresolved question of why breastfeeding may be protective against SIDS.
婴儿猝死综合征(SIDS)主要从风险角度进行描述,重点关注内源性、外源性和时间性风险因素,这些因素可以相互作用,促进致命后果的发生。在这里,我们将以俯卧睡眠姿势和同床共枕这两个 SIDS 的主要风险因素为例,讨论这种基于风险的范式可能存在的局限性。基于一个包含进化理论、发育生物学和文化不匹配理论的多方面理论模型,我们将 SIDS 的易感性概念化为婴儿当前生理调节需求与当前保护能力之间的不平衡。从这个理解出发,SIDS 似乎是一种发育状况,其中与自我保护相关的能力在未来的受害者中未能得到适当发展。由于所有相关的保护资源都必然在正常婴儿发育过程中出现,我们认为 SIDS 可能反映了一种进化不匹配的情况——某些现代发育影响可能过度扩展了儿童的适应(进化)能力。因此,如果将关注点从风险因素扩展到人类婴儿在正常发育过程中获得的保护资源,我们就可以更好地理解 SIDS。我们将广泛分析这种进化-发育理论,以应对 SIDS 研究中的流行病学和实验证据,并解决母乳喂养为何可能对 SIDS 具有保护作用的这一尚未解决的问题。