Recognition of a Kawasaki Disease Shock Syndrome
Top Cited Papers
- 1 May 2009
- journal article
- Published by American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) in Pediatrics
- Vol. 123 (5) , e783-e789
- https://doi.org/10.1542/peds.2008-1871
Abstract
OBJECTIVE. We sought to define the characteristics that distinguish Kawasaki disease shock syndrome from hemodynamically normal Kawasaki disease.METHODS. We collected data prospectively for all patients with Kawasaki disease who were treated at a single institution during a 4-year period. We defined Kawasaki disease shock syndrome on the basis of systolic hypotension for age, a sustained decrease in systolic blood pressure from baseline of ≥20%, or clinical signs of poor perfusion. We compared clinical and laboratory features, coronary artery measurements, and responses to therapy and analyzed indices of ventricular systolic and diastolic function during acute and convalescent Kawasaki disease.RESULTS. Of 187 consecutive patients with Kawasaki disease, 13 (7%) met the definition for Kawasaki disease shock syndrome. All received fluid resuscitation, and 7 (54%) required vasoactive infusions. Compared with patients without shock, patients with Kawasaki disease shock syndrome were more often female and had larger proportions of bands, higher C-reactive protein concentrations, and lower hemoglobin concentrations and platelet counts. Evidence of consumptive coagulopathy was common in the Kawasaki disease shock syndrome group. Patients with Kawasaki disease shock syndrome more often had impaired left ventricular systolic function (ejection fraction of <54%: 4 of 13 patients [31%] vs 2 of 86 patients [4%]), mitral regurgitation (5 of 13 patients [39%] vs 2 of 83 patients [2%]), coronary artery abnormalities (8 of 13 patients [62%] vs 20 of 86 patients [23%]), and intravenous immunoglobulin resistance (6 of 13 patients [46%] vs 32 of 174 patients [18%]). Impairment of ventricular relaxation and compliance persisted among patients with Kawasaki disease shock syndrome after the resolution of other hemodynamic disturbances.CONCLUSIONS. Kawasaki disease shock syndrome is associated with more-severe laboratory markers of inflammation and greater risk of coronary artery abnormalities, mitral regurgitation, and prolonged myocardial dysfunction. These patients may be resistant to immunoglobulin therapy and require additional antiinflammatory treatment.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Resistance to Intravenous Immunoglobulin in Children with Kawasaki DiseaseThe Journal of Pediatrics, 2008
- Propofol–ketamine vs propofol–fentanyl combinations for deep sedation and analgesia in pediatric patients undergoing burn dressing changesaPediatric Anesthesia, 2007
- Ketamine-Propofol Combination Sedation for Fracture Reduction in the Pediatric Emergency DepartmentPediatric Emergency Care, 2007
- A ketamine–propofol admixture does not reduce the pain on injection compared with a lidocaine–propofol admixturePediatric Anesthesia, 2007
- Analysis of the evidence for the lower limit of systolic and mean arterial pressure in childrenPediatric Critical Care Medicine, 2007
- Use of Etomidate as an Induction Agent for Rapid Sequence Intubation in a Pediatric Emergency DepartmentAcademic Emergency Medicine, 2006
- Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome in a Child with Kawasaki DiseaseSouthern Medical Journal, 2005
- Reply: Values for Systolic Blood PressurePediatric Critical Care Medicine, 2005
- Acute heart failure and acute renal failure in Kawasaki diseasePediatrics International, 1994
- Coagulopathy and platelet activation in Kawasaki syndrome: Identification of patients at high risk for development of coronary artery aneurysmsThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1984