Sudden arrhythmic death syndrome

Sudden arrhythmic death syndrome (SADS) is a sudden unexpected death of adolescents and adults, mainly during sleep.[2] One relatively common type is known as Brugada syndrome.[3][4]

Sudden arrhythmic death syndrome
Other namesSudden adult death syndrome (SADS), bed death, sudden unexpected/unexplained death syndrome (SUDS), sudden unexpected/unexplained nocturnal death syndrome (SUNDS), Sudden Death Syndrome
A type of a deadly ventricular arrhythmia - Ventricular fibrillation pattern seen on an EKG
SpecialtyCardiology Edit this on Wikidata
Causes
  • Ion channelopathies:
    Long QT syndrome (LQTS),
    Brugada syndrome,
    CPVT (catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia),
    PCCD (progressive cardiac conduction defect),
    Early repolarization syndrome,
    Mixed sodium channel disease,
    Short QT syndrome
  • Structural heart disease:
    Arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy (ARVC),
    Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM),
    Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM),
    Wolff-Parkinson-White Syndrome (WPW),
    Mitral valve prolapse (MVP)
Frequency14.9 per 100,000 people in Japan
110.8 per 100,000 people in United States[1]

The syndrome is rare in most areas around the world but occurs in populations that are culturally and genetically distinct. It was first noted in 1977 among southeast Asian Hmong refugees in the United States and Canada.[5][6] The syndrome was again noted in Singapore when a retrospective review of records showed that 230 otherwise healthy Thai foreign workers living in Singapore died suddenly of unexplained causes between 1982 and 1990.[7]

Causes

Sudden death of a young person can be caused by heart disease (including cardiomyopathy, congenital heart disease, myocarditis, genetic connective tissue disorders) or conduction disease (WPW syndrome, etc.), medication-related causes or other causes.[8] Rare diseases called ion channelopathies may play a role such as long QT syndrome (LQTS), Brugada syndrome (BrS), CPVT (catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia), progressive cardiac conduction defect (PCCD), early repolarization syndrome, mixed sodium channel disease, and short QT syndrome.[8] In 20% of cases, no cause of death can be found, even after extensive examination.[8]

In young people with type 1 diabetes, unexplained deaths could be due to nighttime hypoglycemia triggering abnormal heart rhythms or cardiac autonomic neuropathy, damage to nerves that control the function of the heart.[9]

Medical examiners have taken into account various factors, such as nutrition, toxicology, heart disease, metabolism, and genetics. Although there is no real known definite cause, extensive research showed victims aged 18 or older were found to have had a hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, a condition in which the heart muscle becomes oddly thickened without any obvious cause.[10] This was the most commonly identified abnormality in sudden death of young adults. Where people have died suddenly, it is most commonly found that they had had CAD (coronary artery disease) or ASCAD (atherosclerotic coronary artery disease), or any level of stress.[10] However, studies reveal that people were known to have had symptoms within the week before the terminal event such as chest pain at ~52% of patients, dyspnea at ~22%, and syncope at ~7%. About 19% are not known to have experienced symptoms.[10] Scientists have also associated this syndrome with a mutation of gene SCN5A that affects the function of the heart. A 2011 autopsy-based study found that sudden death was attributed to a cardiac condition in 79.3% of cases, and was unexplained in 20.7%.[10]

In the Philippines, bangungot (or in their term, sudden adult death syndrome) is mainly caused by the Brugada syndrome.[11]

Diagnosis

By definition, the diagnosis can only occur post-mortem after other causes are ruled out.

Prevention

A 2011 retrospective cohort study using demographic and autopsy data for a 10-year period comprising 15.2 million person-years of active surveillance suggested prevention of sudden death in young adults should focus on evaluation for causes known to be associated with SUD (e.g., primary arrhythmia) among persons less than 35 years old, and emphasise atherosclerotic coronary disease in those older.[10]

A 2003 study found that the only proven way to prevent SADS is with an implantable cardioverter-defibrillator. Oral beta-blockers such as propranolol are ineffective.[12]

Epidemiology

In 1980, a reported pattern of sudden deaths was brought to the attention of the Centers for Disease Control. The first reported sudden death occurred in 1948 when there were 81 similar deaths of Filipino men in Oahu County, Hawaii. However, it did not become relevant because there was no associated pattern. This syndrome continued to become more significant as years went on. By 1981–1982, the annual rate in the United States was high with 92/100,000 among Laotians-Hmong, 82/100,000 among other Laotian ethnic groups, and 59/100,000 among Cambodians.[13]

In a 2008 study it was found that over half of SADS deaths could be attributed to inherited heart disease: unexplained premature sudden deaths in family, long QT syndrome, Brugada syndrome, arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy and others.[14]

A national SADS study in England, funded by the British Heart Foundation, reported results in a 2007 journal article published in Health.[15] The study surveyed 117 coroners' jurisdictions in England. Researchers found that deaths from SADS reported by these coroners occurred "predominantly in young males". There were 500 cases a year in England, eight times more than had previously been estimated. Families are more at risk of SADS if they have a genetic cardiac disease. The study recommended that affected families should undergo "specialised cardiological evaluation".[15]

Asia

Southeast Asian immigrants, who were mostly fleeing the Vietnam War, most often had this syndrome, marking Southeast Asia as the area containing the most people with this fatal syndrome. There are other Asian populations that were affected, such as Filipinos and Chinese Filipinos, Japanese in Japan, and natives of Guam in the United States and Guam.[13] The immigrants with this syndrome were about 33 years old and seemingly healthy, and all but one of the Laotian Hmong refugees were men.[16] The condition appears to primarily affect young Hmong men from Laos (median age 33)[13] and Northeastern Thailand (where the population is mainly of Laotian descent).[17][18]

History

Map of Thailand highlighting Loei Province

Laotian Hmongs were chosen for the study because they had one of the highest sudden death rates in the United States while sleeping. They were originally from Southern China and the highlands of North Vietnam, Laos, and Thailand. The location that was picked for this study was in Ban Vinai in the Loei Province, which is approximately 15 kilometers from the Lao border. This study took place between October 1982 and June 1983 as this syndrome became more of a pressing issue. Ban Vinai was the location chosen because it had 33,000 refugees in 1982, and the largest number of recorded SADS deaths. Because this syndrome was occurring most commonly in those particular men, researchers found it most beneficial and effective to study the populations they migrated from instead of studying victims and populations in the U.S. Because of local religious practices, the Hmong men in Ban Vinai did not receive autopsies. Therefore, the only results and research obtained were relating to deaths outside of the local religion or geographical area.[13]

An interview was arranged with the next of kin who lived with them, witnessed the death, or found the body. The interviews were open ended and allowed the person who was next of kin to describe what they witnessed and what preceding events they thought were relevant to the victim's death. The interviewers also collected information such as illness history, the circumstances of the death, demographic background, and history of any sleep disturbances. A genealogy was then created which included all the relatives and their vital status and/or circumstances of death.[13]

Society, culture, superstition

During the 1970s and 1980s, when an outbreak of this syndrome began, many Southeast Asians were not able to worship properly due to the Laotian Civil War. Hmong people believe that when they do not worship properly, do not perform religious rituals properly or forget to sacrifice, the ancestor spirits or the village spirits do not protect them, thus allowing evil spirit to reach them. These attacks induce a nightmare that leads to sleep paralysis, in which the victim is conscious and experiencing pressure on the chest.[16] It is also common to have a REM state that is out of sequence, where there is a mix of brain states that are normally held separate.[16] After the war, the United States government scattered the Hmong refugees across the U.S. in 53 different cities.[16] Once these nightmare visitations began, a shaman was recommended for psychic protection from the spirits of their sleep.[16] However, scattered across 53 different cities, these victims had no access to a shaman who could protect them.

Hmong people believed that rejecting the role of becoming a shaman, they are taken into the spirit world.

The study author suggested that the Hmong who died were killed by their own beliefs in the spiritual world, otherwise known as Nocturnal pressing spirit attacks. In Indonesia it is called digeuton, which translates to "pressed on" in English.[16] In China it is called bèi guǐ yā (traditional Chinese: 被鬼壓; simplified Chinese: 被鬼压) which translates to "crushed by a ghost" in English.[16] The Dutch call the presence a nachtmerrie, the night-mare.[16] The "merrie" comes from the Middle Dutch mare, an incubus who "lies on people's chests, suffocating them". This phenomenon is known among the Hmong people of Laos,[19] who ascribe these deaths to a malign spirit, dab tsuam (pronounced "dah chua"), said to take the form of a jealous woman.

Bangungot is depicted in the Philippines as a mythological creature called batibat or bangungot.[20] This hag-like creature sits on the victim's face or chest so as to immobilize and suffocate him. When this occurs, the victim is usually experiencing sleep paralysis.

This phenomena inspired the Nightmare On Elm Street series, according to interviews with creator Wes Craven.

English names

NameAcronymNotes
sudden unexpected death syndromeSUDS
sudden unexplained death syndromeSUDS
sudden unexpected nocturnal death syndromeSUNDS
sudden unexplained nocturnal death syndromeSUNDS
sudden adult death syndromeSADS(parallel in form with SIDS)
sudden arrhythmia death syndromeSADS
sudden arrhythmic death syndromeSADS
sudden arrhythmic cardiac death syndrome
bed death

Names in other languages

TermLanguageNotes
lai taiThaiThai: ใหลตาย; meaning "sleep and die"[17][21]
bangungot or uromFilipinoThe term originated from the Tagalog word meaning "to rise and moan in sleep".[22] It is also the Tagalog word for nightmare.
dab tsogHmong[19]dab tsog means "ghost"
dolyeonsaKoreanKorean: 돌연사; meaning literally "sudden death"
pokkuri diseaseJapanese[23]
ya thoomArabicجاثوم
albarsty (Kyrgyz: албарсты)Kyrgyz

See also

References

  1. Yuan, David; Raju, Hariharan (12 September 2019). "Spotlight on sudden arrhythmic death syndrome". Research Reports in Clinical Cardiology. 10: 57–66. doi:10.2147/RRCC.S187480. S2CID 203506307.
  2. Also known as SUDS. See: Reddy PR, Reinier K, Singh T, Mariani R, Gunson K, Jui J, Chugh SS. Physical activity as a trigger of sudden cardiac arrest: The Oregon Sudden Unexpected Death Study. Int J Cardiol. 2008
  3. "Brugada Syndrome". NORD (National Organization for Rare Disorders). 2016. Retrieved 28 October 2017.
  4. "Brugada syndrome". Genetics Home Reference. Retrieved 28 October 2017.
  5. Centers for Disease Control (CDC) (1981). "Sudden, unexpected, nocturnal deaths among Southeast Asian refugees". MMWR. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. 30 (47): 581–589. PMID 6796814.
  6. Parrish RG, Tucker M, Ing R, Encarnacion C, Eberhardt M (1987). "Sudden unexplained death syndrome in Southeast Asian refugees: a review of CDC surveillance". MMWR Surveillance Summaries. 36 (1): 43SS–53SS. PMID 3110586.
  7. Goh KT, Chao TC, Chew CH (1990). "Sudden nocturnal deaths among Thai construction workers in Singapore". Lancet. 335 (8698): 1154. doi:10.1016/0140-6736(90)91153-2. PMID 1971883. S2CID 46669256.
  8. Elijah R Behr (2010). When a young person dies suddenly (PDF) (4 ed.). Cardiac Risk in the Young - CRY. Archived from the original on 20 July 2014.
  9. "Dead in bed syndrome - a term used to describe the sudden unexplained deaths of young people with type 1 diabetes". Diabetes. 10 June 2022 [Originally written 15 January 2019].
  10. Eckart, Robert E.; Shry, Eric A.; Burke, Allen P.; McNear, Jennifer A.; Appel, David A.; Castillo-Rojas, Laudino M.; Avedissian, Lena; Pearse, Lisa A.; Potter, Robert N. (2011). "Sudden Death in Young Adults". Journal of the American College of Cardiology. 58 (12): 1254–1261. doi:10.1016/j.jacc.2011.01.049. PMID 21903060.
  11. Tessa R. Salazar (19 June 2004). "Bangungot' in family? See a heart specialist". Inquirer News Service. Archived from the original on 30 June 2004.
  12. Nademanee K, Veerakul G, Mower M, et al. (2003). "Defibrillator Versus beta-Blockers for Unexplained Death in Thailand (DEBUT): a randomized clinical trial". Circulation. 107 (17): 2221–6. doi:10.1161/01.CIR.0000066319.56234.C8. PMID 12695290.
  13. Munger, Ronald (September 1987). "Sudden Death in Sleep of Laotian-Hmong Refugees in Thailand: A Case-Control Study". American Journal of Public Health. 77 (9): 1187–1190. doi:10.2105/ajph.77.9.1187. PMC 1647019. PMID 3618851.
  14. Behr, Elijah R.; Dalageorgou, Chrysoula; Christiansen, Michael; Syrris, Petros; Hughes, Sian; Tome Esteban, Maria T.; Rowland, Edward; Jeffery, Steve; McKenna, William J. (July 2008). "Sudden arrhythmic death syndrome: familial evaluation identifies inheritable heart disease in the majority of families". European Heart Journal. 29 (13): 1670–1680. doi:10.1093/eurheartj/ehn219. PMID 18508782.
  15. Behr, E. R.; Casey, A.; Sheppard, M.; Wright, M.; Bowker, T. J.; Davies, M. J.; McKenna, W. J.; Wood, D. A. (1 May 2007). "Sudden arrhythmic death syndrome: a national survey of sudden unexplained cardiac death". Heart. 93 (5): 601–605. doi:10.1136/hrt.2006.099598. ISSN 1355-6037. PMC 1955564. PMID 17237131. Retrieved 5 June 2022.
  16. Madrigal, Alexis C. (14 September 2011). "The Dark Side of the Placebo Effect: When Intense Belief Kills". The Atlantic. Retrieved 24 April 2016.
  17. Tatsanavivat P, Chiravatkul A, Klungboonkrong V, Chaisiri S, Jarerntanyaruk L, Munger RG, Saowakontha S (1992). "Sudden and unexplained deaths in sleep (Laitai) of young men in rural northeastern Thailand". Int J Epidemiol. 21 (5): 904–10. doi:10.1093/ije/21.5.904. PMID 1468851.
  18. Tungsanga K, Sriboonlue P (1993). "Sudden unexplained death syndrome in north-east Thailand". International Journal of Epidemiology. 22 (1): 81–7. doi:10.1093/ije/22.1.81. PMID 8449651.
  19. Adler SR (1995). "Refugee stress and folk belief: Hmong sudden deaths". Social Science & Medicine. 40 (12): 1623–9. doi:10.1016/0277-9536(94)00347-V. PMID 7660175.
  20. "BATIBAT | BANGUNGOT - Frightened To Death By Nightmares • THE ASWANG PROJECT". THE ASWANG PROJECT. 16 February 2016. Retrieved 17 February 2021.
  21. Himmunngan P, Sangwatanaroj S, Petmitr S, Viroonudomphol D, Siriyong P, Patmasiriwat P (March 2006). "HLa-class II (DRB & DQB1) in Thai sudden unexplained death syndrome (Thai SUDS) families (Lai-Tai families)". Southeast Asian J. Trop. Med. Public Health. 37 (2): 357–65. PMID 17124999.
  22. Munger, Ronald G.; Booton, Elizabeth A. (1998). "Bangungut in Manila: sudden and unexplained death in sleep of adult Filipinos" (PDF). International Journal of Epidemiology. 27 (4): 677–684. doi:10.1093/ije/27.4.677. PMID 9758125. Archived from the original (PDF) on 30 September 2015.
  23. Gotoh K (1976). "A histopathological study on the conduction system of the so-called "Pokkuri disease" (sudden unexpected cardiac death of unknown origin in Japan)". Jpn Circ J. 40 (7): 753–68. doi:10.1253/jcj.40.753. PMID 966364.

Further reading

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