Kawasaki Disease - Fiery Vessel Fever
- Definition: Acute febrile mucocutaneous lymph node syndrome, a systemic illness.
- Nature: Primarily a medium-vessel vasculitis.
- Age: Typically affects children <5 years; peak incidence 6 months to 2 years.
- Epidemiology: Higher incidence in Asian populations, especially Japanese.
⭐ Untreated, up to 25% of children may develop coronary artery aneurysms.
Kawasaki Disease - CRASH & Burn Alert
📌 CRASH & Burn: Fever (≥5 days) is the "Burn" - persistent and often high-grade.
-
Diagnostic Criteria (Typical KD): Fever ≥5 days PLUS ≥4 of the following:
- Conjunctivitis: Bilateral, non-exudative, limbic-sparing.
- Rash: Polymorphous (maculopapular, morbilliform, or targetoid), often truncal, can involve perineum.
- Adenopathy: Cervical, usually unilateral, firm, non-suppurative, node ≥1.5cm.
- Strawberry tongue/Lip changes: Diffuse oropharyngeal erythema, dry, red, cracked lips.
- Hand/foot changes: Acute erythema/edema of palms/soles; convalescent periungual desquamation (2-3 weeks).
-
Incomplete KD: Suspect with unexplained fever ≥5 days AND <4 CRASH criteria. Requires supportive lab findings (e.g., ↑CRP ≥3mg/dL, ↑ESR ≥40mm/hr) OR positive echocardiogram. Always refer to AHA guidelines for full criteria.
⭐ Coronary artery aneurysms are the most serious complication, mandating echocardiography for all suspected cases to assess for cardiac involvement and guide treatment duration with IVIG and aspirin.
Kawasaki Disease - Lab Sleuth & Mimics
- Labs:
- ↑ESR, ↑CRP (acute phase reactants)
- Leukocytosis (neutrophilia)
- Thrombocytosis (late, characteristic; peaks 2-4 wks)
- Sterile pyuria
- Mild ↑transaminases
- Echo: CRUCIAL (baseline & follow-up) for coronary artery aneurysm (CAA) detection.
⭐ Thrombocytosis is a late but highly characteristic finding in Kawasaki Disease.
- DDx:
- Viral exanthems (Measles, Adenovirus)
- Scarlet fever
- Stevens-Johnson Syndrome (SJS)
- Staphylococcal Scalded Skin Syndrome (SSSS)
- Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis (JIA)
Kawasaki Disease - Heart Shield Protocol
- Primary Goal: Prevent Coronary Artery Aneurysms (CAA). Treat ideally within 10 days of fever onset.
- Standard Therapy:
- IVIG: 2g/kg (single infusion, 10-12h).
- Aspirin:
- Initial High-Dose: 80-100mg/kg/day (q6h).
- Maintenance Low-Dose: 3-5mg/kg/day (once afebrile for 48-72h; continue 6-8 wks if no CAA, longer if CAA).
- Refractory KD (Fever ≥36h post-IVIG):
- 2nd IVIG dose (2g/kg).
- Corticosteroids.
- Infliximab.
- Key Complications:
- Coronary Artery Aneurysms (CAA) - monitor with Echo.
- Myocarditis, pericarditis, valvular issues.
- CAA Management: Long-term low-dose Aspirin; anticoagulation for giant aneurysms.
⭐ Giant aneurysms (diameter >8mm or Z-score ≥10) carry the highest risk of thrombosis and require anticoagulation in addition to aspirin.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Kawasaki Disease (KD): acute febrile vasculitis in children < 5 years.
- Diagnosis relies on CRASH & Burn criteria: Conjunctivitis, Rash, Adenopathy, Strawberry tongue, Hands/feet changes, plus Fever >5 days.
- Most critical complication: Coronary artery aneurysms; monitor with echocardiogram.
- Standard treatment: Intravenous Immunoglobulin (IVIG) and high-dose Aspirin in acute phase.
- Aspirin is later reduced to low-dose for antiplatelet effect.
- Untreated KD can lead to significant cardiac morbidity.
Continue reading on Oncourse
Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.
CONTINUE READING — FREEor get the app