“…Furthermore, we registered upper respiratory symptoms (cough, rhinorrhea, and sore throat), signs of respiratory distress (tachypnea, intercostal, subcostal, or suprasternal retractions, nasal flaring, grunting, and use of accessory muscles), as well as gastrointestinal (diarrhea, vomiting, nausea, and abdominal pain), mucocutaneous (rash, erythema palms and soles, conjunctivitis, and mucositis), neurologic (seizure and persistent disorder of consciousness), and osteoarticular findings (arthralgia). Patients with MIS-C were categorized into four clinical phenotypes: (1) Phenotype with Kawasaki Disease (KD) (complete or incomplete) without shock, (2) Shock phenotype (need for inotrope/vasopressor or fluid resuscitation >20 ml/kg) without KD, (3) Shock with KD phenotype, and (4) Phenotype with fever and inflammation (MIS-C not meeting shock or KD phenotype criteria, and clinically stable) ( 26 , 27 ).…”