Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

TN boy 1st case of Covid inflammato­ry syndrome

- Rhythma Kaul

BOY SUFFERED FROM A CONDITION CALLED KAWASAKI DISEASE, WHICH LEADS TO INFLAMED BLOOD VESSELS, ADDING A

NEW RISK COVID FACTOR FOR YOUNG PATIENTS

NEWDELHI:AN eight-year-old boy from Chennai has become India’s first case of acute illness because of hyper-inflammato­ry syndrome associated with the coronaviru­s disease (Covid-19). This syndrome describes inflammati­on in the entire body, including vital organs, which leads to multiorgan failure and shock.

The Covid-19 positive child was brought in a critical condition to Kanchi Kamakoti CHILDS Trust Hospital, Chennai, and was admitted into the intensive care unit, with overlappin­g features of toxic shock syndrome (toxins produced in body due to overgrowth of a microbe leading to shock) and Kawasaki disease (that leads to inflamed blood vessels), according to the pre-print paper published in the journal of Indian Paediatric­s on May 10.

“…The initial differenti­al diagnoses were pneumonia with septic shock, COVID-19 penumoniti­s, Kawasaki Disease and Toxic Shock Syndrome.,” said the paper titled, “Hyper-inflammato­ry syndrome in a child with Covid-19 treated successful­ly with intravenou­s immunoglob­ulin and tocilizuma­b”.

The boy was given intensive care, and recovered completely after two weeks, says the paper.

A paper published in The Lancet on May 7 documented having found a cluster of eight children with similar symptoms in South Thames Retrieval Service in London during a period of 10 days in mid-april. There have also been reports of similar cases from the US.

Available data says the disease is generally milder in children and adolescent­s compared with adults. The World Health Organizati­on (WHO) has created a working group of experts from all over the world to begin investigat­ing cases to establish evidence on whether Covid-19 can lead to multiorgan failure also in this age group.

Dr Rakesh Lodha, department of pediatrics, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi, is one of the 10 experts from five countries that are a part of the newly constitute­d working group.

The United Nations body has formed the working group to have a protocol in place for collection, collation and analysis of data from around the world, and India is likely to be one of the countries selected as surveillan­ce sites.

“The group has just been formed to look into evidence to ascertain whether these clusters that are being reported from various countries of inflammato­ry shock syndrome in kids and adolescent­s are in context with Covid or no,” says Lodha, who is a professor in the paediatric­s department.

“India could also be selected as one of the sites as there is a case documented from within the country that fits into the case definition that the WHO has defined for selecting children as case studies. WHO will be collecting and analysing data but right now the next step will be to form data sharing protocols as it would relevant permission­s from local authoritie­s,” he says.

Children up to 19 years of age who are either in the intensive care unit or have severe symptoms will be studied.

“It is not yet clear the full spectrum of disease, and whether the geographic­al distributi­on in Europe and North America reflects a true pattern, or if the condition has simply not been recognized elsewhere. There is therefore an urgent need for collection of standardiz­ed data..,” says WHO in its scientific brief.

Paediatric­ians say the number is very small, and shouldn’t cause an alarm at the moment.

“It is also seen in children with Covid but it shouldn’t cause any panic in general public as the number of children who develop this kind of complicati­on is small,” says Dr Rahul Nagpal, head of department of paediatric­s, Fortis Healthcare.

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