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Clinical Pediatrics
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Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy and Apnea (MBPA)

A Survey of Apnea Programs

Michael J. Light, MB, MRCP

Department of Pediatrics, John A. Burns School of Medicine, University of Hawaii, and Kapiolani Medical Center, for Women and Children, 1319 Punahou Street, Honolulu, Hawaii

Mary S. Sheridan, PhD, ACSW

Department of Pediatrics, John A. Burns School of Medicine, University of Hawaii, and Kapiolani Medical Center, for Women and Children, 1319 Punahou Street, Honolulu, Hawaii

The authors sent questionnaires to 127 apnea monitoring programs asking whether they had treated patients whose apnea appeared to have been induced by a parent (Munchausen syndrome by proxy-apnea, or MBPA). Fifty-one programs (40%) reported 54 cases of this kind from among their 20,090 monitored patients (0.27%). The authors obtained further information on 32 of these patients, 83% of whom presented with infantile apnea before the third month of life.

Although medical problems were documented, including apnea, the clinical condition of these infants was inconsistent with the multiple life-threatening episodes typically reported by parents. Twenty-one of the infants reportedly received cardiopulmonary resuscitation at home, 15 had ambulance calls to the home, and 24 were rehospitalized. Child Protective Service agencies were consulted for 12 patients, 5 of whom were placed in foster homes. Three index infants and five siblings are known to be dead, and one additional infant is severely brain damaged from abuse.

The typical presentation of MBPA is multiple, reported, serious episodes of apnea occurring in the presence of only one person. When neither episodes nor cause can be documented satisfactorily, the diagnosis of MBPA should be considered and steps taken to confirm or refute it.

Clinical Pediatrics, Vol. 29, No. 3, 162-168 (1990)
DOI: 10.1177/000992289002900304


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