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© 1998 Oxford University Press

research-article

Bangungut in Manila: sudden and unexplained death in sleep of adult Filipinos

Ronald G Munger and Elizabeth A Booton

Department of Nutrition and Food Sciences, Utah State University Logan, Utah, 84322-8700, USA

BACKGROUND: Sudden and unexplained death in sleep (SUDS) is a leading cause of death of young men in several Asian populations, but the history and epidemiology of SUDS are not well known.

METHODS: Autopsy records were reviewed in Manila in a study of the classification of SUDS. Death certificates filed in Manila during 1948–1982 were then reviewed in a study of SUDS incidence. A nested case-control study of death certificates examined birthplace as art indicator of SUDS risk.

RESULTS: The classification of SUDS cases in Manila during 1948–1982 (N = 722) evolved from the folk term, bangungut (‘to rise and moan during sleep’), to various descriptions of post-mortem artefacts. The characteristics of victims in each of the groups were similar: 96% male, mean age 33 years, and modal time of death 3:00 am. The deaths were seasonal, peaking in December-January. SUDS victims were more likely than deceased controls to have been born outside of the Manila region (relative odds = 2.11; 95% CI: 1.59–2.78). The SUDS rate for men aged 25–44 years increased from 10.8 to 26.3 per 100 000 person-years from 1948 to 1982.

CONCLUSIONS: The death certificate classification of SUDS in Manila has changed considerably, obscuring an increase in incidence. SUDS appears to be a regional phenomenon in Southeast Asia and environmental causes are likely because the deaths are seasonal, increased over the timespan studied, and are more common among migrants to Manila than among those born there.

Keywords Sudden death, sleep, Southeast Asia, Philippines, surveillance, epidemiology

Accepted 17 October 1997


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