1 / 19

Happy Monday!

Happy Monday!. Morning Report July 16, 2012. Semantic Qualifiers. Illness Script. Predisposing Conditions Age, gender, preceding events (trauma, viral illness, etc), medication use, past medical history (diagnoses, surgeries, etc) Pathophysiological Insult

maddy
Download Presentation

Happy Monday!

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Happy Monday! Morning Report July 16, 2012

  2. Semantic Qualifiers

  3. Illness Script • Predisposing Conditions • Age, gender, preceding events (trauma, viral illness, etc), medication use, past medical history (diagnoses, surgeries, etc) • Pathophysiological Insult • What is physically happening in the body, organisms involved, etc. • Clinical Manifestations • Signs and symptoms • Labs and imaging

  4. Differential Diagnosis**

  5. Predisposing Conditions • Highest prevalence in Japan (10x that of US) • In the US • Most common in Asians and Pacific Islanders • Least common in caucasians • Age • Median = 2yo • 76% of cases in <5yo • Male:Female = 3:2 • Seasonal peaks in winter and spring • Genetic predisposition

  6. Pathophysiology • Complete etiology is unknown, but features suggest an infectious source. • Generalized vasculitis • Affects all blood vessels throughout the body • Preferentially involves the coronary arteries • Process • Initial neutrophil influx  • Large mononuclear cells w/lymphocytes and plasma cells  • Active inflammation  • Progressive fibrosis and scar formation

  7. Clinical Manifestations** “C R A S H”

  8. Conjunctivitis** • Bilateral bulbar injection • No exudate • Painless • Limbic sparing • Shortly after fever starts

  9. Rash** • Various forms • Nonspecific, diffuse with scattered macules & erythematouspapules • Occasionally scarlatiniform, erythroderma, erythemamultiforme, • uriticarial, or a fine micropustular eruption • Not bullous of vesicular • Within 5d of fever • Often involves diaper area

  10. Adenopathy** • Least common feature • Anterior cervical triangle • Usually unilateral • > 1.5 cm • Firm, nontender • No overlying erythema

  11. Strawberry Tongue** • Changes of the lips and oral cavity • Strawberry tongue • Cracked, red, swollen, bleeding lips • Diffuse erythema of oral mucosa • Oral ulcers and exudates are not seen

  12. Hands and Feet** • Erythema of palms and soles • Firm, sometimes painful induration of the hands and feet • Later desquamation that usually begins in periungal region (2-3 weeks after fever onset)

  13. Other** • Arthritis/arthralgias that involve multiple joints • Irritability*** • GI complaints • Diarrhea • Vomiting • Abdominal pain • Hepatomegaly and jaundice • Acalculous distension of gallbladder

  14. Labs** • Leukocytosis • Majority with WBC > 15,000 • Predominance of immature and mature granulocytes • Anemia • Thrombocytosis…with platelet counts 500-1000 x 103 • Elevated ESR (>40 mm/hr) and CRP (>3mg/dL) • Mild to moderate elevation of LFTs • Mild hyperbilirubinemia • Sterile pyuria • Aseptic meningitis (if CSF obtained)

  15. Treatment** • High-dose aspirin (80-100mg/kg/day divided QID) during acute phase of illness  • 3-5mg/kg/day until no evidence of coronary changes by 6-8 • weeks • Continued aspirin therapy if coronary changes present • IVIG • 2g/kg/dose (up to 2-3 doses depending on fever) • Children treated with IVIG and ASA had faster resolution of • fever and fewer coronary abnormalities than those treated • with ASA alone • Refractory KD…treatment is controversial

  16. Cardiac Complications** • Coronary artery aneurysm (identified on echo within 1-2mo of diagnosis) • 20-25% of untreated patients; 5% of treated patients • Resolution within 1-2 years in approximately 50% • Myocardial infarction • Principal cause of death • Most occur within 1 year of disease onset but can occur • years later • Myocarditis • Valvulitis • Pericarditis with effusion

  17. Echocardiogram** • Obtain on all patients with suspected Kawasaki • At diagnosis • Follow-up…usually at 2 weeks and 6 weeks after diagnosis

  18. Follow-Up

  19. Thanks  • EVERY Content Spec!! • “Kawasaki Disease.” Pediatrics in Review. 2008, v29 (9), p308. • Noon conference = Feedback and Evaluations (Residents ONLY)

More Related