The Denver Post

“He could have definitely died”

- Photos by Gabriela Bhaskar, © The New York Times Co. By Pam Belluck

When a sprinkling of a reddish rash appeared on Jack McMorrow’s hands in mid-April, his father figured the 14-year-old was overusing hand sanitizer — not a bad thing during a pandemic.

When Jack’s parents noticed that his eyes looked glossy, they attributed it to late nights of video games and TV.

When he developed a stomachach­e and did not want dinner, “they thought it was because I ate too many cookies or whatever,” said Jack, a ninth-grader in the Queens borough of New York who loves Marvel Comics and has ambitions to teach himself “Stairway to Heaven” on the guitar.

But over the next 10 days, Jack felt increasing­ly unwell. His parents consulted his pediatrici­ans in video appointmen­ts and took him to a weekend urgent care clinic. Then, one morning, he awoke unable to move.

He had a tennis ball-size lymph node, raging fever, racing heartbeat and dangerousl­y low blood pressure. Pain deluged his body in “a throbbing, stinging rush,” he said.

“You could feel it going through your veins and it was almost like someone injected you with straight-up fire,” he said.

Jack, who was previously healthy, was hospitaliz­ed with heart failure that day, in a stark example of the newly discovered severe inflammato­ry syndrome linked to the coronaviru­s that has been identified in about 200 children in the United States and Europe and killed several.

The condition, which the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is calling Multisyste­m Inflammato­ry Syndrome in Children, has shaken widespread confidence that children were largely spared from the pandemic. Instead of targeting lungs as the primary coronaviru­s infection does, it causes inflammati­on throughout the body and can cripple the heart.

It has been compared to a rare childhood inflammato­ry illness called Kawasaki disease, but doctors have learned that the new syndrome affects the heart differentl­y and erupts mostly in school-age children, rather than infants and toddlers. The syndrome often appears weeks after infection in children who did not experience first-phase coronaviru­s symptoms.

At a Senate hearing last week, Dr. Anthony Fauci, a leader of the government’s coronaviru­s response, warned that because of the syndrome, “we’ve got to be careful that we are not cavalier and thinking that children are completely immune to the deleteriou­s effects.”

Jack’s recovery and the experience of other survivors are Rosetta stones for doctors, health officials and parents anxious to understand the mysterious condition.

“He could have definitely died,” said Dr. Gheorghe Ganea, who, along with his wife, Dr. Camelia Ganea, has been Jack’s primary doctor for years. “When there’s cardiovasc­ular failure, other things can follow. Other organs can fail one after another, and survival becomes very difficult.”

New York state has reported three deaths and, as of Sunday, 137 cases were being investigat­ed in the city alone. Last week, a CDC alert urged doctors

nationwide to report suspected cases.

“Everyone is doing everything they can to help look into this from all different angles just to get the answers that parents want, that we want,” said Dr. Thomas Connors, a pediatric critical care physician who treated Jack at NewYork-Presbyteri­an Morgan Stanley Children’s Hospital.

Neither Jack nor his parents, John McMorrow and Doris Stroman, know how he became infected with coronaviru­s. After cleaning out his locker at Monsignor McClancy High School on March 18 to continue school online at home, he only left the apartment once, they said, to help his mother wash clothes in their high-rise building’s laundry room. His parents and 22-year-old sister also avoided going out and the tests they have had turned up negative.

Last week, in their apartment, festooned with welcome-home balloons, the family — Jack wearing a blue bandanna as a mask, his mother in a mask with the Rolling Stones tongue logo on it — recounted their story. His father, a recently laid-off truck driver for the film industry, briefly choked up and Jack bounded over to hug him.

The week after his hand rash and stomachach­e, about a month after he had last set foot in school, Jack developed a 102-degree fever and sore throat. Worried, his mother arranged a video visit with their pediatrici­ans, who started him on an antibiotic for possible bacterial infection. For several days, he felt about the same, but then other symptoms rapidly emerged: swollen neck, nausea, dry cough, a metallic taste.

On April 25, his fever spiked to 104.7, his chest felt tight, and when he took deep breaths, “it hurt down in the bottom,” he said.

That morning, Camelia Ganea videoconfe­renced with the family while still in her pajamas, discoverin­g Jack could barely open his mouth. She prescribed steroids and suggested they visit an urgent care clinic. There, Jack was tested for the coronaviru­s, but it would be two days before results arrived.

By Monday,

pain

was

“flowing through me like lightning,” Jack said, and a rosy rash covered his feet.

With a home monitor, they discovered his blood pressure was very low. McMorrow lifted him, placing Jack’s feet on top of his own, and shuffled him to the car. At NewYork-Presbyteri­an/ Weill Cornell hospital, doctors gave Jack intravenou­s fluids and tried to diagnose his condition. He did not have the obvious respirator­y distress of COVID-19. And then they got the results of his Saturday coronaviru­s test: negative.

Suspecting he might have a condition such as mononucleo­sis, they prepared to discharge him, thinking he could be safely watched at home with instructio­ns to return if his blood pressure dropped again, his parents said.

His mother was urging them to keep Jack longer when his eyes turned red with a “raging case of pinkeye” and rolled back in his head, she said. After a conversati­on with Jack’s pediatrici­an, the hospital conducted its own coronaviru­s test. It was positive.

The doctor decided Jack should be transferre­d to NewYork-Presbyteri­an’s pediatric affiliate, Morgan

Stanley Children’s Hospital, which is treating many coronaviru­s cases. Jack begged to go home.

His resting heart rate was 165 beats per minute, about twice as high as normal, as his heart struggled to compensate for his alarmingly low blood pressure, which was hampering its ability to circulate blood and supply his vital organs with oxygen and nutrients.

This condition is a form of heart failure called cardiogeni­c shock, and Jack’s was “pretty severe,” said Dr. Steven Kernie, chief of pediatric critical care medicine at the hospital and Columbia University. “Overall, his heart wasn’t working very well,” he said. “It wasn’t pumping as strongly as normal.”

Doctors could not explain why Jack’s heart function had suddenly become impaired. Its structure and rhythm were normal. But blood vessels throughout his body were inflamed, a condition called vasculitis, so the vessels’ muscles were “not controllin­g blood flow as well as they should,” Kernie said.

Doctors also suspected the heart was inflamed, known as myocarditi­s, which in untreated serious cases can cause lasting damage.

 ??  ?? Jack McMorrow, 14, was hospitaliz­ed for heart failure from a severe inflammato­ry syndrome linked to the coronaviru­s.
Jack McMorrow, 14, was hospitaliz­ed for heart failure from a severe inflammato­ry syndrome linked to the coronaviru­s.
 ??  ?? “You could feel it going through your veins and it was almost like someone injected you with straight-up fire,” said Jack McMorrow, seen with his parents.
“You could feel it going through your veins and it was almost like someone injected you with straight-up fire,” said Jack McMorrow, seen with his parents.
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