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Thrombocytopenic Purpura Associated With Exanthema Subitum
Pediatrics, 1977Postinfectious thrombocytopenic purpura in children is well known, and several viral infections have been incriminated, including rubella, measles, measles vaccination, chickenpox, mumps, smallpox vaccination, infectious mononucleosis, hepatitis, cytomegalovirus infection, and upper respiratory tract infection, as reviewed by McClure in the January ...
Kozo Nishimura, Masanori Igarashi
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EXANTHEMA SUBITUM (ROSEOLA INFANTUM)
Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1939Exanthema subitum (roseola infantum) is one of the mildest exanthematous diseases to which infants under 2 years are subject. It possesses, however, considerable medical interest, because its origin is unknown and because there is a good deal of confusion in differentiating it from other exanthematous diseases.
Leon Greenspan, Louis H. Barenberg
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Exanthema Subitum and Febrile Convulsions
Acta Paediatrica, 1956SummaryOut of 448 cases of febrile convulsions admitted to the Children's Hospital, Gothenburg, during 1945–1954, at least 7.6% (34 cases) occurred in connection with exanthema subitum.Among the children with febrile convulsions who were 12 months old or younger, exanthema subitum was the cause of fever in 16.2%.The 34 cases of exanthema subitum had a ...
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Neuroradiologic findings of brain lesions related to exanthema subitum
Pediatric Neurology, 1998The neuroradiologic findings of the brain lesions in eight infants with exanthema subitum were normal in three, suspected vascular lesions in two, and symmetric thalamic lesions with or without diffuse brain edema in the other three. In addition, diffuse brain edema or focal cerebral lesions were observed in 13 previously reported Japanese infants ...
Seiji Kimura, Atsuo Nezu
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Zesde ziekte/exanthema subitum
2017De zesde ziekte (exanthema subitum, roseola infantum) is een exanthemateuze kinderziekte, veroorzaakt door het humaan herpesvirus type 6 (HHV-6).
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ROSEOLA INFANTUM (EXANTHEMA SUBITUM) COMPLICATED BY HEMIPLEGIA
Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1945Roseola infantum, a common disease of infancy and early childhood, was first described by Zahorsky, 1 in 1910. This syndrome did not attract much attention until Veeder and Hempelmann 2 published their paper, in 1921. These authors suggested the name exanthema subitum and were the first to describe the characteristic changes in the blood that always ...
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Role of human herpesvirus 6 infection in infants ith exanthema subitum
The Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal, 1990Twenty-two infants with exanthema subitum and their mothers were studied for human herpesvirus 6 (HHV-6) infection. HHV-6 was isolated from 13 of the 22 infants, in 5 infants by cultivation of their peripheral blood mononuclear cells and in the other 8 infants by cocultivation of their mononuclear cells with those from newborn cord blood.
Yamamoto N+4 more
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