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川崎病的病例报告

The narratives of Kawasaki disease.

作者信息

Kushner Howard I, Turner Christena L, Bastian John F, Burns Jane C

出版信息

Bull Hist Med. 2004 Summer;78(2):410-39. doi: 10.1353/bhm.2004.0082.

Abstract

Kawasaki disease is a rash/fever illness of early childhood in which coronary artery aneurysms (CAA), sometimes fatal, may develop in up to 25 percent of untreated children. Because its etiology and pathophysiology are unknown and no diagnostic laboratory test exists, diagnosis is made via a list of clinical signs; however, a significant number of children fail to meet the clinical criteria and go on to develop CAA. We suspected a connection between these missed cases and the continuing difficulty in identifying the etiological agent(s) and mechanisms for CAA. In search of that connection, we launched a historical investigation into the institutionalization of the clinical criteria, and explored how this process influenced the framing of research questions. Our findings suggest that the canonization of the Kawasaki disease case definition was as much due to the enshrinement of the historical narrative as to compelling scientific findings. The Kawasaki disease narrative encompasses interrelated issues of definition, discovery, and naming; these, in turn, have profoundly influenced diagnosis, treatment, and research. "Atypical" cases, despite being at risk for CAA, often fail to receive prompt diagnosis and treatment; consequently, research has been limited to the population that meets the diagnostic criteria for Kawasaki disease, rather than including those who are at risk of CAA. Although clinical concerns prompted this investigation, it nevertheless has important implications for the history of medicine: it provides an illustration of how a historical interrogation of a syndrome's construction can free medical researchers to pursue novel approaches. Equally important, it demonstrates how historians can make unique contributions as collaborators in clinical care and medical research.

摘要

川崎病是一种幼儿期出现的皮疹/发热性疾病,在未经治疗的儿童中,高达25%可能会发展为冠状动脉瘤(CAA),有时甚至会致命。由于其病因和病理生理学尚不清楚,且不存在诊断性实验室检查,因此通过一系列临床体征进行诊断;然而,相当数量的儿童不符合临床标准,却仍会发展为CAA。我们怀疑这些漏诊病例与持续难以确定CAA的病原体和发病机制之间存在关联。为了寻找这种关联,我们对临床标准的制度化进行了历史调查,并探讨了这一过程如何影响研究问题的构建。我们的研究结果表明,川崎病病例定义的规范化,很大程度上是由于历史叙述的神圣化,而非令人信服的科学发现。川崎病的叙述涵盖了定义、发现和命名等相互关联的问题;这些问题反过来又深刻影响了诊断、治疗和研究。“非典型”病例尽管有患CAA的风险,但往往未能得到及时诊断和治疗;因此,研究仅限于符合川崎病诊断标准的人群,而没有包括那些有患CAA风险的人群。尽管临床问题引发了这项调查,但它对医学史仍具有重要意义:它说明了对一种综合征构建的历史审视如何能使医学研究人员自由地追求新方法。同样重要的是,它展示了历史学家作为临床护理和医学研究的合作者可以做出独特贡献。

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