Medicina (Mar 2020)

Clinical Manifestations of Kawasaki Disease at Different Age Spectrum: A Ten-Year Study

  • Cristina Medeiros R. de Magalhães,
  • Fernanda Coutinho de Almeida,
  • Lenora Gandolfi,
  • Riccardo Pratesi,
  • Natália Ribeiro de M. Alves,
  • Nicole Selleski,
  • Renata Puppin Zandonadi,
  • Eduardo Yoshio Nakano,
  • Claudia B. Pratesi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/medicina56040145
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 56, no. 4
p. 145

Abstract

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Background and objectives: The present study is the first known in Latin America to enroll a substantial number of Kawasaki disease (KD) patients with an extended follow-up. This study aimed to: (1) to expose the difficulties and delays in the diagnosis of KD in a developing country, (2) to describe and correlate the clinical features of this disorder with the children’s age at the time of disease onset, (3) to correlate the frequent lack of early diagnosis with a delayed application of appropriate treatment, and (4) to describe the outcome and eventual recurrences of KD in our region. Materials and Methods: Three hundred and one participants (183 males and 118 females) included in the study were diagnosed and, subsequently, clinically followed for ten years (January 2007 to December 2016) at the Pediatric Rheumatology Walk-in Clinic of the Children’s Hospital of Brasilia. Results: Episodes ranged from four months to two years. This rate of recurrence was well-above that disclosed by previous reports. Delay in diagnosis, in all age groups, caused an undesirable delay between the disease onset, the final diagnosis, and the administration of intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG). KD recurred in 25 (8.3%) of the children during the first three years of follow-up. In seven patients, KD recurred twice, with an interval between episodes ranging from four months to two years. Conclusions: This rate of recurrence was well-above that disclosed by previous reports. In Latin America, aside from a handful of physicians and researchers, KD is being ignored. There is a pressing need to educate primary health care physicians and bring awareness to the fact that KD is not an exotic condition that affects only the Asian populations but a disorder that already exists among us and that frequently results in severe consequences.

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