Abstract

Anaemia has been shown to be associated with an increased apnoeic pause frequency and with cyanotic breath-holding spells. In this study, the relationship between anaemia and apparent life-threatening events was retrospectively investigated in 72 term infants referred for assessment and home monitoring following an apparent life-threatening event. For 41 infants (25 male, 16 female; 38 Caucasian, three Asian) a venous red blood cell count was available. Their median age at the time of the apparent life-threatening event was 2.0 (0.6-6.7) months. The Hb levels in these 41 infants were plotted against normal data from the literature. Thirty-four infants had Hb levels below the mean, whilst six infants had values above the corresponding normal mean; the one remaining infant had a Hb value identical to the normal mean. Significantly more infants than expected had Hb levels below the mean (p less than 0.001, binomial test). Anaemia may have played a role in the pathophysiology leading to life-threatening events in some of the infants investigated in this study.

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