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A Simple Guide to Mucocutaneous Lymph Node Syndrome (Kawasaki Disease), Diagnosis, Treatment and Related Conditions

Author: Kenneth Kee
SKU: 9798215590225

$2.99

Mucocutaneous lymph node syndrome, also known as Kawasaki disease, is a rare condition that primarily affects young children and typically causes fever, swelling of the lymph nodes, and symptoms affecting the skin and mucous membranes.Mucocutaneous lymph node syndrome is a more suitable name than Kawasaki disease due to its symptoms affecting the skin and mucous membranes and enlarged lymph node.

Description

This book describes Mucocutaneous Lymph Node Syndrome (Kawasaki Disease), Diagnosis and Treatment and Related DiseasesMucocutaneous lymph node syndrome is a childhood diseaseThe disease occur in children of all agesIt typically cause fever and lymph node swellingsMostly it causes the skin to start peeling.Patients present with first with fever then skin and eye drynessThere may be also swelling of feet and hand with rednessThere is also sore throat with sometimes tonsillar swellingThis is followed by red rash with skin peelingDiagnosis is by symptoms and elimination of other diseasesElectrocardiography may be done to check on heart myopathyComplications are vasculitis, coronary heart disease and arthritisThere may be also blood vessel aneurysm and myocarditisTreatment is usually with immunogammaglobulinAspirin is also used under proper doctor’s supervisionCorticosteroids is useful to treat arthritis and myocarditisMost children make a full recovery after about 3 weeks-An original poem by Kenneth KeeMucocutaneous lymph node syndrome, also known as Kawasaki disease, is a rare condition that primarily affects young children and typically causes fever, swelling of the lymph nodes, and symptoms affecting the skin and mucous membranes.Mucocutaneous lymph node syndrome is a more suitable name for this because of its symptoms affecting the skin and mucous membranes and lymph node enlargement than Kawasaki disease.It is characterized by inflammation of the blood vessels throughout the body, including the coronary arteries, and can lead to complications such as aneurysms or heart disease.Mucocutaneous lymph node syndrome happens mainly in children below 5 years.It does not transmit from child to child (is not contagious).The disorder happens most often during the periods of late winter and early spring.Mucocutaneous lymph node syndrome can harm the coronary arteries which carry blood to the heart muscle.Most of the treated children can recover from the disease without long-term disorders.The precise cause is not known, but it is thought to be linked to a wind-borne or water-borne pathogen infection.An autoimmune disease has been proposed as the cause.In recent years there have been studies that have revealed certain genetic markers (such as HLA-B51 and HLA-Bw22j2 serotypes, chemokine receptor gene-cluster CCR2-CCR5 haplotypes and FCGR3A polymorphism of the IgG receptor IIIa) demonstrate a predisposition to the disease.The siblings of patients are 10-20 times likely to develop the disease compared to normal people.The triad of symptoms which are frequent are:Fever together with headache persisting for more than 5 daysSwelling of one or more lymph nodes in the neckBlotchy red rash over the entire body with typical skin peeling in the second week of illnessThe diagnosis is always clinical.Classical symptoms and signs are 5 days of high fever, lymph nodes enlargement, rash and peeling of the skin from the fingers and toes.Echocardiography is the investigation of choice to assess for coronary artery aneurysms.The standard treatment during the disorder’s acute stage is high-dose aspirin and immune globulin.Most children who receive these treatments improve rapidly within 24 hours.For a small percentage of patients, the fever persists.These children may necessitate a second round of intravenous immunoglobulin.There are new clinical trials with the use of infliximab, etanercept, and anakinra.TABLE OF CONTENTIntroductionChapter 1 Mucocutaneous Lymph Node SyndromeChapter 2 CausesChapter 3 SymptomsChapter 4 DiagnosisChapter 5 TreatmentChapter 6 PrognosisChapter 7 Scarlet feverChapter 8 Infectious MononucleosisEpilogue

About Kenneth Kee

Medical doctor since 1972.Started Kee Clinic in 1974 at 15 Holland Dr #03-102, relocated to 36 Holland Dr #01-10 in 2009.Did my M.Sc (Health Management ) in 1991 and Ph.D (Healthcare Administration) in 1993.Dr Kenneth Kee is still working as a family doctor at the age of 74However he has reduced his consultation hours to 3 hours in the morning and 2 hours in the afternoon.He first started writing free blogs on medical disorders seen in the clinic in 2007 on http://kennethkee.blogspot.com.His purpose in writing these simple guides was for the health education of his patients which is also his dissertation for his Ph.D (Healthcare Administration). He then wrote an autobiography account of his journey as a medical student to family doctor on his other blog http://afamilydoctorstale.blogspot.comThis autobiography account “A Family Doctor’s Tale” was combined with his early “A Simple Guide to Medical Disorders” into a new WordPress Blog “A Family Doctor’s Tale” on http://ken-med.com.From which many free articles from the blog was taken and put together into 1000 eBooks.He apologized for typos and spelling mistakes in his earlier books.He will endeavor to improve the writing in futures.Some people have complained that the simple guides are too simple.For their information they are made simple in order to educate the patients.The later books go into more details of medical disorders.He has published 1000 eBooks on various subjects on health, 1 autobiography of his medical journey, another on the autobiography of a Cancer survivor, 2 children stories and one how to study for his nephew and grand-daughter.The purpose of these simple guides is to educate patient on health disorders and not meant as textbooks.He does not do any night duty since 2000 ever since Dr Tan had his second stroke.His clinic is now relocated to the Buona Vista Community Centre.The 2 units of his original clinic are being demolished to make way for a new Shopping Mall.He is now doing some blogging and internet surfing (bulletin boards since the 1980’s) starting with the Apple computer and going to PC.The entire PC is upgraded by himself from XT to the present Pentium duo core. The present Intel i7 CPU is out of reach at the moment because the CPU is still expensive.He is also into DIY changing his own toilet cistern and other electric appliance.His hunger for knowledge has not abated and he is a lifelong learner.The children have all grown up and there are 2 grandchildren who are even more technically advanced than the grandfather where mobile phones are concerned.This book is taken from some of the many articles in his blog (now with 740 posts) A Family Doctor’s Tale.Dr Kee is the author of:”A Family Doctor’s Tale””Life Lessons Learned From The Study And Practice Of Medicine””Case Notes From A Family Doctor”

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Kenneth Kee

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