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Child beats rare COVID-19 syndrome

Inflammato­ry symptoms have struck 33 Michigan children

- Kristen Jordan Shamus Detroit Free Press USA TODAY NETWORK

DETROIT – Hannah Peck doesn’t know how or when her son was exposed to novel coronaviru­s.

He never had any symptoms of COVID-19, and her family has been following social distancing guidelines during the stay-at-home order.

So when Levi Nobles got sick in early May, a few days after his seventh birthday, she didn’t suspect it had anything to do with the virus.

“I thought it was just a stomach bug going on,” said Peck, 29, of Shelby Township. He was vomiting and had a fever, so, “that’s what I thought it was.”

But when Levi’s symptoms dragged into the fourth day, Peck brought him to the pediatrici­an. The doctor was concerned there could be COVID-19 involvemen­t.

Reports had emerged from around the world about children like Levi who were exhibiting symptoms of a newly identified pediatric inflammato­ry syndrome linked to the virus with some symptoms similar to Kawasaki disease.

Levi had a couple of its identifyin­g symptoms, too: red, dry, cracked lips and unusually bloodshot eyes.

At least 33 children in Michigan now have been diagnosed with the same rare condition as of May 22, according to the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services.

Nationally, there have been hundreds of cases reported just in the last few weeks. As of May 22, New York state reported 161 children with symptoms and three deaths. Of the New York cases, 92% tested positive for COVID-19 either by a diagnostic swab testing, antibody testing, or both, according to the state Department of Health.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention dubbed it Multisyste­m Inflammato­ry Syndrome in Children, or MIS-C, and issued an advisory May 14, asking doctors to watch for and report cases to public health officials. Children with this condition can have any of the following symptoms:

❚ Fever

❚ Bloodshot eyes, cracked lips or bright red tongue

❚ Rash

❚ Abdominal pain

❚ Diarrhea

❚ Vomiting

❚ Neck pain

❚ Extreme exhaustion

The syndrome also can cause inflammati­on in different parts of the body, including the heart, lungs, kidneys, brain, skin, eyes, and gastrointe­stinal organs.

When the disease attacks children’s hearts and lungs, it can be especially dangerous. Some of the kids who’ve developed this condition have needed intensive care, and have been so sick they needed a ventilator to help them breathe or an artificial heart and lung machine known as ECMO (Extracorpo­real Membrane Oxygenatio­n).

“The hallmarks seem to be a very sick child, and generally speaking, a child with low blood pressure and evidence of shock,” said Dr. David Kimberlin, editor of Red Book, the Report of the Committee on Infectious Diseases for the American Academy of Pediatrics. “There may be some abdominal pain, some diarrhea . ... They also may have a rash. They may not. They may have red eyes. They may not.”

It also affects a wide age range of children – from the very young to older teens, Kimberlin said, citing research that suggests the average age of those affected is 8-10 years old.

While an associatio­n has been made between this syndrome and novel coronaviru­s, it’s too soon to say definitive­ly that they’re connected.

“This hyperinfla­mmatory syndrome ... has been showing up in areas of the world where, within the prior three or four weeks, the COVID-19 virus had started circulatin­g, and most but not all of these children test positive in some form or fashion for the COVID virus,” said Kimberlin, who also is a professor of pediatrics at the University of Alabama at Birmingham.

“So there’s a temporal associatio­n – COVID in the community, three or four weeks later, these rare cases of children with this hyperinfla­mmatory syndrome being recognized – but there’s not a causal associatio­n yet.

Symptoms seemed to change daily

Levi’s pediatrici­an urged Peck to bring her son to the hospital.

“The doctor looked at him and said, ‘You need to get ... him checked out for what all these kids were getting, this Kawasaki-like syndrome going on,” Peck said.

She took him to Beaumont Hospital, Troy, but was soon transferre­d by ambulance to Beaumont Children’s in Royal Oak.

There, Dr. Bishara Freij, chief of pediatric infectious disease, evaluated Levi for MIS-C.

So far in the pandemic, Freij has treated six kids with the condition, and they all had similar symptoms: persistent fever, gastrointe­stinal pain, diarrhea or vomiting, and red eyes. Some, but not all, have had rashes, too.

“We’re seeing rapid progressio­n as well.”

The children Freij has treated all have tested positive for coronaviru­s antibodies, too, which means they had previous coronaviru­s infections, even if they didn’t know it.

The disease is new, Freij said, so doctors don’t know what might trigger it in some children, but not others. But some of his patients are participat­ing in research to try to find immune system clues that may answer those questions.

For Levi, the symptoms seemed to change daily. When he was admitted to the hospital on May 5, his primary problems were fever and vomiting. But by the next day, Peck said his abdominal pain worsened.

He had developed what’s called peritoniti­s, an inflammati­on of the membrane lining the abdominal wall, Freij said. Imaging tests also revealed that Levi had inflammati­on of the small intestine.

Then, his lungs filled with fluid. He developed pneumonia, and needed supplement­al oxygen to breathe. He was moved to the intensive care unit.

“His blood pressure started dropping,” Freij said, “and he had not only pneumonia, but he had heart dysfunctio­n . ... And he developed extensive lung disease.” Peck described the ordeal as “scary.”

“It just was one thing after another,” said Peck, who is a dental hygienist. She’s been off work for months because the governor’s executive order required all dentists in the state to temporaril­y shut down their practices during the height of the pandemic.

Negative for coronaviru­s, positive for antibodies

Levi was swabbed three times to test him for coronaviru­s. All three times, the test came back negative. But an antibody blood test showed that the first grader had antibodies in his blood from the virus. That means he likely contracted it but was asymptomat­ic until this cascade of inflammato­ry problems struck.

That was surprising to Peck.

“He hasn’t really gone anywhere,” she said. “He goes outside, but it’s just me and him. He doesn’t play with anybody or do anything with anyone. When we go to the grocery store, we do the Kroger pickup. We don’t go inside . ... We haven’t been around anybody, so I’m not really sure when or how any of us could have even picked it up.”

And that’s something everyone needs to keep in mind, Kimberlin said, as states begin to reopen. The virus is circulatin­g in communitie­s and all of us are vulnerable.

After nearly a week in the hospital, Levi was able to go home again to finish his recovery.

He’s back to Zoom calls with his classmates and teacher, playing video games and outside, too.

And though there are still follow-up appointmen­ts and tests in Levi’s future to ensure there are no complicati­ons, he’s likely to make a full recovery, Freij said.

Peck said her advice to parents is this: “If your child is sick, get them in. Get them checked out.”

 ?? FAMILY PHOTO ?? Levi Nobles, 7, of Shelby Township was among the Michigan children hospitaliz­ed with the newly identified disease associated with novel coronaviru­s.
FAMILY PHOTO Levi Nobles, 7, of Shelby Township was among the Michigan children hospitaliz­ed with the newly identified disease associated with novel coronaviru­s.

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