Amniotic fluid aspiration in cases of SIDS.

Fracasso T, Karger B, Vennemann M, Bajanowski T, Golla-Schindler UM, Pfeiffer H

Research article (journal)

Abstract

The scope of this study was to evaluate the incidence and the eventual consequences of amniotic fluid aspiration (AFA) in cases of sudden infant death. Cases of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS; n = 113: 39 females, 74 males; mean age 4.6 months) were compared to a control group of 39 cases of explained death (14 females, 25 males; mean age 5.6 months). In each case, sections of the lung stained with hematoxylin and eosin and with the immunohistochemical reaction 34BE12 specific for cytokeratins were available. The microscope slides were observed at x200 magnification and semi-quantitatively classified into four categories(-, +, ++, and +++). In both groups, rests of amniotic fluid could be observed up to the fourth month of life. The comparison between the two groups did not show any significant difference. In the SIDS group, immunohistochemical reactions with the antibodies CD68, MRP8, MRP14, 27E10, 25F9, CD3, CD20Cy, and CD45R0 were available for the lungs. Twelve cases with AFA were compared to a group of SIDS cases without AFA with similar age and pathological distribution to evaluate whether the presence of amniotic remnants induced inflammatory changes in the lungs. No differences emerged. This study shows that AFA is not a rare event. Even moderate to severe AFA does not necessary cause death. A correlation between AFA and SIDS could not be shown.

Details about the publication

JournalInternational Journal of Legal Medicine (Int J Legal Med)
Volume124
Issue2
Page range113-117
StatusPublished
Release year2010
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
DOI10.1007/s00414-009-0384-1

Authors from the University of Münster

Golla-Schindler, Ute Maria
Institute for Mineralogy
Karger, Bernd
Institute of Forensic Medicine
Pfeiffer, Heidi
Institute of Forensic Medicine
Vennemann, Mechtild
Institute of Epidemiology and Social Medicine