Kawasaki Disease
Medical Author: William C.
Shiel Jr., MD, FACP, FACR
What is Kawasaki disease?
Kawasaki disease is an uncommon illness in children that is
characterized by fever of at least five days duration together with four of the
following five findings:
- inflammation with reddening of the whites of the eyes (conjunctivitis)
- redness or swelling of the hands or feet; or generalized skin peeling
- rash
- lymph gland swelling in the neck
- cracking inflamed lips or throat; or red "strawberry" tongue
What are the usual symptoms of Kawasaki disease?
The usual symptoms of Kawasaki disease include fever, reddening
of the eyes, cracked and inflamed lips and mucous membranes of
the mouth, ulcerative
gum disease (gingivitis), swollen glands in the neck (cervical lymphadenopathy), and a rash that is
raised and bright red. The rash appears in a glove-and-sock fashion
over the skin of the hands and feet which becomes hard, swollen (edematous), and then peels off.
What are the less common findings?
Most of the common symptoms described above will resolve without complications, even if untreated. Less common findings include inflammation of the lining of the
heart (pericarditis), joints (arthritis), or covering of the brain and spinal cord (meningitis), and other heart complications listed below under serious complications. The outlook for an individual affected is primarily determined by the seriousness of any heart complications.
What is the difference between Kawasaki disease and Kawasaki syndrome?
None. Kawasaki disease is also referred to Kawasaki syndrome.
It was first described in the late 1960s in Japan by the
pediatrician Tomisaku Kawasaki.
What is mucocutaneous lymph node syndrome?
Kawasaki disease or syndrome is also called the mucocutaneous
lymph node syndrome, a name that is quite
descriptive because the disease is characterized by the typical
changes in the mucous membranes that line the lips and mouth and by
the enlarged and tender lymph glands.
Next: What causes Kawasaki disease? »
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