Abstract

The goal of the present investigation is to analyze thymus, brain, heart, liver, and kidney weights in SIDS victims compared to controls. Epidemiologic risk factors for SIDS (eg, male gender, genetic, obstetric, environmental, smoke exposure, nonbreastfeeding, etc.) are consistent with an infectious process underlying many of these deaths. Data from autopsy reports on 585 SIDS victims and comparison deaths (n=294 control, n=291 SIDS) were analyzed. Cases were obtained from Australia (n=184 controls, n=98 SIDS) and Russia (n=122 controls, n=181 SIDS). Log10 transform of thymus and other organ weights was computed because variables were skewed. Multivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA) of standardized log values were age-adjusted by multivariate analysis of covariance (MANCOVA). The standardized log10 thymus residual adjusted for age, brain and liver weights was computed for the final analysis. After controlling for age by MANCOVA, thymus, body, brain and liver weights were significantly higher among SIDS compared to non-SIDS victims. The largest difference as between covariate-adjusted log10 non-SIDS thymus weight differed (mean=1.423, 95% CI: 1.393-1.452) and log10 non-SIDS thymus weight (mean=1.269, 95% CI: 1.243-1.294) were significantly different (P < .0001). Heart weight was significantly lower in SIDS victims. When adjusted for confounders (age, body, and organ weights), SIDS victims have a significantly heavier thymus and brain compared to non-SIDS controls who died of trauma. This finding supports previously published studies that link infection to SIDS deaths.

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