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Cureus . Kawasaki Disease-Like Features in 10 Pediatric COVID-19 Cases: A Retrospective Study

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  • Cureus . Kawasaki Disease-Like Features in 10 Pediatric COVID-19 Cases: A Retrospective Study


    Cureus


    . 2020 Oct 19;12(10):e11035.
    doi: 10.7759/cureus.11035.
    Kawasaki Disease-Like Features in 10 Pediatric COVID-19 Cases: A Retrospective Study


    Noor Ul Falah 1 , Shahnawaz Hashmi 1 , Zahoor Ahmed 1 , Ali Jaan 1 , Ali Akhtar 2 , Farhan Khalid 1 , Umar Farooque 3 , Muhammad Tayyab Shera 1 , Sundas Ali 4 , Ayesha Javed 1



    Affiliations

    Abstract

    Children with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), which is caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus type 2 (SARS-CoV-2), usually present with symptoms of mild upper respiratory tract infection without developing any significant complications. However, this observation has been rendered incautious by hundreds of clinical cases from around the world that have depicted a less benign multisystem inflammatory illness mimicking Kawasaki disease in COVID-positive pediatric patients. Our study aimed at retrospectively reviewing the different features of Kawasaki disease-like illness in children suffering from COVID-19, including the complications, laboratory investigations, treatment strategies used during their hospital stay, and outcomes. We searched the electronic database of the two pediatric units of Mayo Hospital, Lahore, Pakistan, for children who had been admitted to the ward between April 2020 and July 2020 and were diagnosed with COVID-19. A total of 10 such pediatric cases were found, whose clinical details were then reviewed and the obtained data were presented in the form of tables and percentages. The median age was between 4 months to 11 years (mean: 6 years). Of the 10 patients, 8 (80%) were boys. Criteria for Kawasaki disease were met in all of them (100%), with a complete presentation in five (50%). Fever (100%), conjunctival and oral cavity changes (90%), and rash (80%) were the most common features. Seven (70%) patients required admission to a critical care unit, but no mortality occurred. This article can assist in understanding and dealing with Kawasaki disease-like manifestation of pediatric COVID-19 infection, especially in critical care settings, and its possible complications. It will help in a timely and appropriate decision-making regarding treatment and management of such cases.

    Keywords: children; coronavirus; coronavirus disease; covid-19; inflammatory illness; kawasaki disease; pediatric; respiratory tract infection; sars-cov-2.

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