Face-straight-down and face-near-straight-down positions in healthy, prone-sleeping infants*
References (36)
- et al.
Impaired ventilation in infants sleeping facedown: potential significance for sudden infant death syndrome
J Pediatr
(1993) The behavioral states of the newborn infant: a review
Brain Res
(1974)- et al.
Sleep and wakefulness can be distinguished in children by videotape and cardiorespiratory recordings
Chest
(1996) - et al.
Accuracy of respiratory inductive plethysmography during wakefulness and sleep in patients with obstructive sleep apnea
Chest
(1992) - et al.
Unintentional suffocation by rebreathing: a death scene and physiologic investigation of a possible cause of sudden infant death
J Pediatr
(1993) - et al.
Sudden infant death syndrome: 1987 perspective
J Pediatr
(1987) Understanding and preventing SIDS
Curr Opin Pediatr
(1994)- et al.
Further evidence supporting a causal relationship between prone sleeping position and SIDS
J Paediatr Child Heath
(1992) - et al.
Can the fall in Avon's sudden infant death rate be explained by changes in sleeping position?
BMJ
(1992) - et al.
A survey of sleeping position practices in preterm infants [abstract]
Pediatr Res
(1995)
A sleep position-dependent mechanism for infant death on sheepskins
Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med [Am J Dis Child]
(1993)
Physical properties of bedding that may increase risk of sudden infant death syndrome in prone-sleeping infants
Pediatr Res
(1994)
The pharyngeal effect of partial nasal obstruction
Pediatrics
(1979)
Detection of movement/arousal in sleeping children by computerized analysis of videotapes [abstract]
Am Rev Respir Dis
(1993)
Comparison of supine and prone noninvasive measurements of breathing patterns in full-term newborns
Pediatr Pulmonol
(1994)
Home testing may be preferable to conventional polysomnography for diagnosis of pediatric obstructive sleep apnea (OSA)
Pediatr Pulmonol
(1995)
Movement/ arousals: description, classification and relationship to sleep apnea in children
Am J Respir Crit Care Med
(1994)
Obstructive apnea, associated patterns of movement, heart rate, and oxygenation in infants at low and increased risk for SIDS
Pediatr Pulmonol
(1993)
Cited by (0)
- *
Supported by Montreal Children's Hospital Research Institute and McGill University, and the Jeremy Rill Center and Canadian Foundation for the Study of Infant Deaths.
Copyright © 1996 Published by Mosby, Inc.