Press information
May 8, 2009

Sudden Infant Death Syndrome associated with new
virus
Ljungan virus, transmitted from animals to
humans, has been found in 11 of 12 cases of Sudden
Infant Death Syndrome or SIDS. Investigators from
Sweden and the USA present these findings in the
scientific journal Forensic Science in Medicine and
Pathology. Animals infected with the virus suffer
from a similar disease. Population cycles of wild
rodents carrying Ljungan virus correlate with the
frequency of SIDS cases.
Ljungan virus has recently been associated with
malformations and intrauterine death in pregnant
women. Investigators from Sweden and the USA have
now also found this virus in the heart, lung and
brain of children dying during their first year of
life from so called Sudden Infant Death syndrome
(SIDS). Twelve cases were investigated.
“We found the Ljungan virus in four out of five
cases where no natural cause of deaths had been
found. The virus was also found in seven infant
deaths that showed signs of myocarditis,” says
author Bo Niklasson adjunct professor at Uppsala
University and Research Director at Apodemus AB
Stockholm, Sweden.
Laboratory mice infected with the virus during
pregnancy suffer from a similar disease. Pups die
before or after birth sometimes without any
pathological findings.
Coauthor Petra Råsten Almqvist, MD, PhD,
Department of Forensic Medicine, Stockholm, Sweden,
a department investigating some 10 cases annually,
notes:
“Animals carrying Ljungan virus also die without
any visible signs of disease to explain the cause of
death just like in cases of SIDS.”
Ljungan virus is a zoonosis transmitted from
animals to humans. The virus has wild rodents as its
main natural reservoir. Recent studies have found
that Ljungan virus is also associated with severe
diseases during pregnancy such as malformation and
fetal death during late pregnancy, so called
intrauterine fetal death (IUFD). The scientists have
shown a correlation between the number of small
rodents in nature and the incidence of both IUFD and
SIDS.
Ljungan virus has been found in many countries in
Europe and in the USA.
“It will be important to investigate whether
Ljungan virus similarly causes prenatal and
postnatal death in other parts of the world,” says
Dr William Klitz, geneticist and co-author of the
report at the Public Health Institute in Oakland and
the University of California, Berkeley.
The scientific report can be found
here
For further information:
Bo Niklasson, MD, PhD, adjunct professor Uppsala
university, Sweden and Research Director Apodemus AB
Phone + 45 8 619 71 71 cell phone + 46 708 23 23 23,
mail: bo.niklasson@apodemus.se
Petra Råsten Almqvist, MD, PhD. Department of
Forensic Medicine, Stockholm, Sweden
Phone + 46 8 545 421 00, mail: Petra.Almqvist@rmv.se
William Klitz, PhD, University of California,
Berkeley USA
Phone: + 1 510 643 1594, mail: klitz@berkeley.edu
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