Kawasaki disease: Difference between revisions
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**Changes in lips and oral cavity: Erythema, lips cracking, strawberry tongue, diffuse injection of oral and pharyngeal mucosae |
**Changes in lips and oral cavity: Erythema, lips cracking, strawberry tongue, diffuse injection of oral and pharyngeal mucosae |
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**Cervical lymphadenopathy (>1.5-cm diameter), usually unilateral |
**Cervical lymphadenopathy (>1.5-cm diameter), usually unilateral |
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*Exclusion of other diseases with similar |
*Exclusion of other diseases with similar findings |
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===Incomplete Kawasaki disease=== |
===Incomplete Kawasaki disease=== |
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Latest revision as of 18:27, 30 September 2025
Background
- A self-limited vasculitis of unknown etiology that occurs primarily in children
Diagnostic Criteria
- "Warm CREAM" mnemonic: fever plus conjunctivitis, rash, extremity involvement, adenopathy, and mucosal involvement
- Fever persisting at least 5 days, with at least 4 principal features:
- Changes in extremities
- Acute: Erythema of palms, soles; edema of hands, feet
- Subacute: Periungual peeling of fingers, toes in weeks 2 and 3
- Polymorphous exanthem
- Bilateral bulbar conjunctival injection without exudate
- Changes in lips and oral cavity: Erythema, lips cracking, strawberry tongue, diffuse injection of oral and pharyngeal mucosae
- Cervical lymphadenopathy (>1.5-cm diameter), usually unilateral
- Changes in extremities
- Exclusion of other diseases with similar findings
Incomplete Kawasaki disease
- Do not meet the full criteria above
Investigations
- CBC shows granulocyte-predominant leukocytosis with a normochromic, normocytic anemia
- Can have thrombocytopenia
- D-dimer may be elevated
- Liver enzymes elevated in a third of patients, mild or moderate
- Hypoalbuminemia, particularly in severe acute disease
- Sterile pyuria in 80%
- Echocardiogram, mainly for coronary aneurysm
- Can also see LV dilatation, systolic dysfunction, pericardial effusion, mitral or other valve regurgitation
Differential Diagnosis
- Viral infections: measles, adenovirus, enterovirus, Epstein-Barr virus
- Scarlet fever
- Staphylococcal scalded skin syndrome
- Toxic shock syndrome
- Bacterial cervical lymphadenitis
- Drug hypersensitivity reactions
- Stevens-Johnson syndrome
- Juvenile rheumatoid arthritis
- Rocky Mountain spotted fever
- Leptospirosis
- Mercury hypersensitivity reaction (acrodynia)
Management
- IVIG plus aspirin, reduces the rate of coronary artery aneurysm