Results 141 to 150 of about 4,940 (188)
Kawasaki Syndrome (The Mucocutaneous Lymph Node Syndrome)
Kawasaki syndrome is a newly-recognized clinical entity characterized by multisystem involvement. It has an acute onset and triphasic clinical course. Although essentially a self-limiting disease, permanent vascular damage, especially involving the coronary arteries, may result.
Marian E Melish
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Gallbladder Hydrops in Mucocutaneous Lymph Node Syndrome
A 36-month-old boy had acute gallbladder hydrops in association with mucocutaneous lymph node syndrome. A review of 46 other cases of this association has shown that patients having MLNS with gallbladder hydrops are older than those without gallbladder hydrops.
Y S, Choi, B, Sharma
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Acute Febrile Mucocutaneous Lymph Node Syndrome
More than a decade ago, Tomisaku Kawasaki, a Japanese pediatrician, described an acute exanthematous disease characterized by persistent fever, mucous membrane hyperemia, cervical lymph node enlargement, and periungal desquamation in 50 infants and children who had been seen during the preceding six-year period at the Japan Red Cross Medical Center in ...
R, Yanagihara, J K, Todd
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Mucocutaneous lymph node syndrome
WILLIAM H. NECHES
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Beau's Lines in Mucocutaneous Lymph Node Syndrome
To the Editor .—In an excellent review of mucocutaneous lymph node syndrome (MLNS) by Yanagihara and Todd (Journal1980;134:603-614) and more recently in a case report by Glanzer et at, 1 transverse grooves or furrows are described, which appeared one to two months after the illness.
FRANK A. BURES
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