Objective To develop a composite disease activity score for systemic JIA (sJIA) and to provide preliminary evidence of its validity. Methods The systemic Juvenile Arthritis Disease Activity Score (sJADAS) was constructed by adding to the four items of the original JADAS a fifth item that aimed to quantify the activity of systemic features. Validation analyses were conducted on patients with definite or probable/possible sJIA enrolled at first visit or at the time of a flare, who had active systemic manifestations, which should include fever. Patients were reassessed 2 weeks to 3 months after baseline. Three versions were examined, including ESR, CRP or no acute-phase reactant. Results A total of 163 patients were included at 30 centres in 10 countries. The sJADAS was found to be feasible and to possess face and content validity, good construct validity, satisfactory internal consistency (Cronbach’s alpha 0.64–0.65), fair ability to discriminate between patients with different disease activity states and between those whose parents were satisfied or not satisfied with illness outcome (P < 0.0001 for both), and strong responsiveness to change over time (standardized response mean 2.04–2.58). Overall, these properties were found to be better than those of the original JADAS and of DAS for RA and of Puchot score for adult-onset Still’s disease. Conclusion The sJADAS showed good measurement properties and is therefore a valid instrument for the assessment of disease activity in children with sJIA. The performance of the new tool should be further examined in other patient cohorts that are evaluated prospectively.
Drug rash with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms (DRESS) syndrome reflects a serious hypersensitivity reaction to drugs, and is characterized by skin rash, fever, lymph node enlargement, and internal organ involvement. So far, numerous drugs such as sulfonamides, phenobarbital, sulfasalazine, carbamazepine, and phenytoin have been reported to cause DRESS syndrome. We report a case of a 10-year-old girl who developed clinical manifestations of fever, rash, lymphadenopathy, hypereosinophilia, and visceral involvement (hepatitis and pneumonitis) after taking phenobarbital for seizures, with subsequent development of sepsis, acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) and spontaneous air leak syndrome (pnemothorax and pneumomediastinum). She was put on steroids and various antibiotics and was ventilated, but ultimately succumbed to sepsis and pulmonary complications.
Kawasaki disease (KD) is one of the commonest vasculitis of childhood, where diagnosis is clinical based on a plethora of signs and symptoms. One of the typical findings is the changes in the extremities including the nail changes. Orange-brown chromonychia is a colour change in the nails which has been observed in some cases of KD. Here, we report a series of 40 patients of KD, where a typical transverse orange-brown discolouration of nails or chromonychia was noted in 29 patients. Though chromonychia is noted in many other rheumatic and nonrheumatic diseases, the typical transverse orange-brown chromonychia observed in KD patients can be included as an additional clinical feature in diagnosis of KD.
Dengue is a major health concern in South Asian countries transmitted by bite of day breeder mosquitoes Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus . Severity of plasma leak, shock, bleeding tendency and other organ dysfunction can be more pronounced in infants. The management becomes further complicated in the presence of a co-existing COVID-19 infection. Although COVID-19 infection is usually asymptomatic or has mild manifestations in children, however in presence of serious co-infection like dengue it can modify the course of the illness and lead to drastic consequences. Here, we present one such case of a 9-month-old female child who tested positive for dengue as well as COVID-19 during the ongoing corona pandemic and went on to develop shock, encephalopathy with deranged liver enzymes but managed to overcome all odds and recover from the disease by day 14 of illness.
There have been several recent reports of children presenting with severe multisystem inflammatory syndrome (PIMS) resembling complete or incomplete Kawasaki disease (KD) during COVID19 pandemic. Being a novel disease, limited data is available for its identification and management. We report a child presenting with fever, neck swelling, and generalized edema, who was diagnosed as PIMS. MRI neck showed retropharyngeal phlegmon resembling similar finding in KD.
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