Diagnostic guidelines for Kawasaki Disease was revised to meet the present situation in 2002. This issue intends to explain new guidelines and their backgrounds. Major alterations are interpretation of cases with 4 or fewer febrile days shortened by early intravenous immunoglobulin treatment, and the clinical importance of atypical (incomplete, or suspected) cases.
The present new neonatal anthropometric charts may reveal unrestricted growth pattern mimicking fetal growth. Use of these charts may result in recognition of abnormal fetal growth and risk in preterm infants. Further studies are needed to evaluate the risk for adverse neonatal and long-term outcome among small-for-gestational-age infants using these neonatal charts.
The causal agent of Kawasaki disease (KD) remains unknown after more than 40 years of
intensive research. The number of cases continues to rise in many parts of the world
and KD is the most common cause of acquired heart disease in childhood in developed
countries. Analyses of the three major KD epidemics in Japan, major non-epidemic
interannual fluctuations of KD cases in Japan and San Diego, and the seasonal
variation of KD in Japan, Hawaii, and San Diego, reveals a consistent pattern
wherein KD cases are often linked to large-scale wind currents originating in
central Asia and traversing the north Pacific. Results suggest that the
environmental trigger for KD could be wind-borne. Efforts to isolate the causative
agent of KD should focus on the microbiology of aerosols.
Incomplete KD should not be equated with mild KD. Patients with four principal symptoms were comparable to cKD with respect to CAA occurrence. In patients with one to three symptoms also, especially in those under 1 year and older than 4 years of age, other significant symptoms and laboratory findings of the guidelines are very important in making a correct and early diagnosis of iKD so as to prevent CAA.
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