Baer Aryeh Z, Rubin Lorry G, Shapiro Craig A, Sood Sunil K, Rajan Sujatha, Shapir Yehuda, Romano Angela, Bierman Fredrick Z
Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Pediatrics, Schneider Children's Hospital of the North Shore-Long Island Jewish Health System, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New Hyde Park, NY 11040, USA.
Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 2006 Jul;160(7):686-90. doi: 10.1001/archpedi.160.7.686.
To determine whether coronary artery lesions (ectasia and aneurysm) are commonly observed on the initial echocardiogram of patients with acute Kawasaki syndrome, whether coronary artery ectasia and/or aneurysms occur more frequently in patients with incomplete Kawasaki syndrome than in those patients with complete findings, and whether earlier diagnosis and treatment of Kawasaki syndrome are associated with less frequent occurrence of coronary artery ectasia and/or aneurysm.
A retrospective medical record review.
A tertiary care pediatric hospital.
One hundred patients treated for Kawasaki syndrome between July 1, 1998, and June 30, 2003, who were identified by a medical record search.
Prevalence of coronary artery lesions (ectasia and aneurysm) on the initial and subsequent echocardiograms.
Forty-four percent of patients had a coronary artery lesion (31% with ectasia, 13% with aneurysm) on the initial echocardiogram. Patients with incomplete Kawasaki syndrome were treated significantly later (median, 10 days) and had a significantly higher occurrence of coronary artery aneurysms over the course of their illness (37%) than those with complete Kawasaki syndrome, who were treated at a median of 7 days (P<.001) and had a 12% aneurysm occurrence (P = .009). Patients treated by day 7 of illness had a less frequent occurrence of aneurysm (6%) compared with those patients treated between days 8 and 10 of illness (27%) (P = .03).
Coronary artery lesions are frequently detected on the initial echocardiogram of children with Kawasaki syndrome. If future studies show ectasia to have a relatively high degree of specificity for Kawasaki syndrome, the initial echocardiography may be a useful adjunctive diagnostic test.
确定在急性川崎病综合征患者的初次超声心动图检查中,冠状动脉病变(扩张和动脉瘤)是否常见;不完全川崎病综合征患者的冠状动脉扩张和/或动脉瘤发生率是否高于完全型患者;以及川崎病综合征的早期诊断和治疗是否与冠状动脉扩张和/或动脉瘤的发生率降低相关。
回顾性病历审查。
一家三级儿科医院。
通过病历检索确定的1998年7月1日至2003年6月30日期间接受川崎病治疗的100名患者。
初次及后续超声心动图检查中冠状动脉病变(扩张和动脉瘤)的患病率。
44%的患者在初次超声心动图检查时有冠状动脉病变(31%为扩张,13%为动脉瘤)。不完全川崎病综合征患者的治疗时间明显较晚(中位数为10天),且在病程中冠状动脉瘤的发生率显著高于完全型川崎病综合征患者,后者的治疗中位数为7天(P<0.001),动脉瘤发生率为12%(P = 0.009)。发病第7天前接受治疗的患者动脉瘤发生率较低(6%),而发病第8至10天接受治疗的患者动脉瘤发生率为27%(P = 0.03)。
在川崎病患儿的初次超声心动图检查中经常检测到冠状动脉病变。如果未来的研究表明扩张对川崎病综合征具有较高的特异性,那么初次超声心动图检查可能是一种有用的辅助诊断测试。