E-ISSN 1858-8360 | ISSN 0256-4408
 

Case Report 


Severe desquamation in Kawasaki disease: Is it somehow protective?

Jubran Theeb Alqanatish, Amir Babiker.

Abstract
Kawasaki disease is a common vasculitis that typically affects children between one and five years of age. We report a 12-year-old boy who presented following a presumed diagnosis of pharyngitis associated with nondesquamating skin rash and conjunctivitis. Despite treatment with amoxicillin for seven days, his fever persisted for ten days and then remitted. Two weeks later, he developed full thickness extensive desquamation of his palms and soles that mandated a visit to emergency department in our tertiary health centre. Physical examination revealed full thickness desquamation of his palms and soles with absence of erythema or swelling and he had unremarkable systemic examination. Laboratory tests showed thrombocytosis and high erythrocytes sedimentation rate. Throat culture and Anti-streptolysin-O titer were negative. Aspirin, anti-platelets dose, was initiated. Echocardiography was performed in the first visit and repeated three times later: at four weeks, six weeks and at three months of the illness revealing normal coronary arteries. Follow up complete blood count and sedimentation rate were normal after six weeks, therefore, aspirin was discontinued. Full thickness
desquamation, not as it would be expected, might be somehow protective against the involvement of coronary arteries in Kawasaki disease

Key words: Coronary; Desquamation; Kawasaki; Peeling; Saudi Arabia.


 
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Pubmed Style

Jubran Theeb Alqanatish, Amir Babiker. Severe desquamation in Kawasaki disease: Is it somehow protective?. Sudan J Paed. 2017; 17(2): 56-59. doi:10.24911/SJP.2017.2.7


Web Style

Jubran Theeb Alqanatish, Amir Babiker. Severe desquamation in Kawasaki disease: Is it somehow protective?. https://sudanjp.com//?mno=286191 [Access: February 06, 2024]. doi:10.24911/SJP.2017.2.7


AMA (American Medical Association) Style

Jubran Theeb Alqanatish, Amir Babiker. Severe desquamation in Kawasaki disease: Is it somehow protective?. Sudan J Paed. 2017; 17(2): 56-59. doi:10.24911/SJP.2017.2.7



Vancouver/ICMJE Style

Jubran Theeb Alqanatish, Amir Babiker. Severe desquamation in Kawasaki disease: Is it somehow protective?. Sudan J Paed. (2017), [cited February 06, 2024]; 17(2): 56-59. doi:10.24911/SJP.2017.2.7



Harvard Style

Jubran Theeb Alqanatish, Amir Babiker (2017) Severe desquamation in Kawasaki disease: Is it somehow protective?. Sudan J Paed, 17 (2), 56-59. doi:10.24911/SJP.2017.2.7



Turabian Style

Jubran Theeb Alqanatish, Amir Babiker. 2017. Severe desquamation in Kawasaki disease: Is it somehow protective?. Sudanese Journal of Paediatrics, 17 (2), 56-59. doi:10.24911/SJP.2017.2.7



Chicago Style

Jubran Theeb Alqanatish, Amir Babiker. "Severe desquamation in Kawasaki disease: Is it somehow protective?." Sudanese Journal of Paediatrics 17 (2017), 56-59. doi:10.24911/SJP.2017.2.7



MLA (The Modern Language Association) Style

Jubran Theeb Alqanatish, Amir Babiker. "Severe desquamation in Kawasaki disease: Is it somehow protective?." Sudanese Journal of Paediatrics 17.2 (2017), 56-59. Print. doi:10.24911/SJP.2017.2.7



APA (American Psychological Association) Style

Jubran Theeb Alqanatish, Amir Babiker (2017) Severe desquamation in Kawasaki disease: Is it somehow protective?. Sudanese Journal of Paediatrics, 17 (2), 56-59. doi:10.24911/SJP.2017.2.7





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