Kawasaki Disease Flashcards

1
Q

Define Kawasaki Disease.

A

Acute childhood febrile illness with small + medium vessel vasculitis.

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2
Q

Explain the aetiology of Kawasaki Disease.

A

Infectious agent may trigger in immuno-genetically disposed

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3
Q

5 risk factors for Kawasaki Disease?

A

Asian (esp. Japanese)

< 5y

Winter-spring peak

1% +ve FH

Siblings of KD case

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4
Q

What are differential diagnoses for KD?

A

Streptococcal disease (scarlet fever)

Viral infections (measles, EBV, enterovirus)

Staphylococcal scalded skin syndrome

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5
Q

Summarise the epidemiology of KD.

A

Most common acquired heart disease in children

Much more common in Japanese children

M > F

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6
Q

What criteria guide dx of KD?

A

Fever >5 days + 4 of:

  1. Conjunctivitis
  2. Oral mucous membrane changes- cracked lips/ strawberry tongue
  3. Peripheral extremity changes: hand/ feet erythema, oedema, desquamation
  4. Polymorphous rash
  5. Cervical lymphadenopathy
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7
Q

How is Kawasaki disease diagnosed?

A

Clinical dx

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8
Q

What is the management for KD?

A

IVIG: High-dose (2 g/kg) IV

Most effective if < 10d since onset

Aspirin: High-dose (80-100 mg/kg/ day in 4 doses) until day 24-72hr post fever cessation (up to 14d) followed by low-dose (3–5 mg/kg OD) for 6–8w

Steroids (Methylpred/ Pred): If 2 IVIG infusions have been ineffective.

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9
Q

What are complications associated with KD?

A

Coronary artery aneurysms develop in 15-25% of untreated children and may lead to myocardial infarction, sudden death or IHD (2%).

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10
Q

What are the classic signs and Sx of Kawasaki disease?

A

Conjunctivitis: bilateral

Rash: Polymorphous, extremities to trunk

Adenopathy: Cervical lymphadenopathy

Strawberry tongue + cracked lips

Hands + feet swollen (+desquamate)

Burn: Fever >38.5, >5d (no response to antipyretics)

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11
Q

What bloods may be seen in KD?

A

Mild-moderate anaemia

High WCC

High CRP/ESR

High platelets (subacute phase).

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12
Q

What imaging test is used in KD, why, and when is this repeated?

A

Echo

Detect coronary artery aneurysm

Repeat at 1-2w + 4-6w post tx

May be normal in 1st week of illness, does not exclude KD

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13
Q

Why is IVIG used in KD?

A

Reduces risk of coronary artery aneurysm.

Reduces duration of fever

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14
Q

Why is Aspirin used in KD?

A

High dose for anti-inflammatory effect until fever subsided

Continued at lower dose for anti platelet effect until ESR normalised (1-2m)

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15
Q

Why is KD the only disease in which aspirin is prescribed to children? Describe what can happen.

A

Aspirin SE in kids = Reye’s syndrome

Encephalopathy + hepatic dysfunction

Vomiting, confusion, seizures, coma

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