Статья

Clinical, laboratory-instrumental characteristics, course and therapy of pediatric multisystem inflammatory syndrome associated with covid-19

Y. Novikova, D. Ovsyannikov, A. Glazyrina, O. Zhdanova, N. Zvereva, M. Karpenko, E. Kryshova, S. Kurbanova, A. Rtishchev, R. Sayfullin, A. Kharkin, I. Shchederkina, E. Bryksina, P. Bogdan, N. Kolganova, D. Sergeev, M. Zorina, E. Petryaykina, V. Gorev,
2020

The most severe manifestation of the new coronavirus infection COVID-19 in children is the multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C). A systematic review of foreign publications as of July 25, 2020 contains an analysis of the disease course in 662 children with this syndrome and is used for comparison with the data obtained. Objective of the research: to characterize clinical manifestation, results of laboratory and instrumental studies, therapy, outcomes and consequences of the COVID-19-associated MIS-C, based on the observation of patients hospitalized to Morozov Children's City Clinical Hospital and Children’s clinical hospital of infectious diseases № 6 from May 1 to September 15, 2020. Materials and methods: the pilot study included 32 children aged 9 months – 15 years with COVID-19-associated MIS-C, verified based on WHO criteria (2020), including symptoms of Kawasaki disease (KD), arterial hypotension/shock, laboratory and instrumental signs of heart damage, signs of coagulopathy, gastrointestinal symptoms, increased inflammation markers, COVID-19 markers. Results: the median age of patients was 6 years, boys predominated among the patients (66%), all patients had antibodies to SARS-CoV-2 (31 children of the IgG class); MIS-C manifested itself as a combination of KD symptom complex (75% of patients) with arterial hypotension/shock (28%), neurological (50%), respiratory (41%), gastrointestinal (59%) symptoms; macrophage activation syndrome (MAS) was verified in 16% of patients. Therapy included intravenous immunoglobulin (75%), systemic glucocorticosteroids (88%), anticoagulants (91%), vasoactive/vasopressor support (31%). In 38% of cases treatment was performed in intensive care unit; one child died. According to echocardiography, 16% of patients had coronariitis, ectasia, and coronary arteries aneurysms. Conclusion: COVID-19-associated MIS-C is characterized by a severe course, cross-features with KD, shock syndrome with KD, MAS which requires intensive therapy and can cause acquired pathology of the cardiovascular system in children.

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Версии

  • 1. Version of Record от 2020-11-01

Метаданные

Об авторах
  • Y. Novikova
    RUDN University, Morozov Children’s City Clinical Hospital
  • D. Ovsyannikov
    RUDN University, Morozov Children’s City Clinical Hospital, Children’s clinical hospital of infectious diseases № 6
  • A. Glazyrina
    RUDN University, Morozov Children’s City Clinical Hospital
  • O. Zhdanova
    Children’s clinical hospital of infectious diseases № 6
  • N. Zvereva
    Children’s clinical hospital of infectious diseases № 6
  • M. Karpenko
    RUDN University, Children’s clinical hospital of infectious diseases № 6
  • E. Kryshova
    Morozov Children’s City Clinical Hospital
  • S. Kurbanova
    Morozov Children’s City Clinical Hospital
  • A. Rtishchev
    RUDN University, Morozov Children’s City Clinical Hospital, Pirogov Russian National Research Medical University (RNRMU)
  • R. Sayfullin
    Pirogov Russian National Research Medical University (RNRMU)
  • A. Kharkin
    Morozov Children’s City Clinical Hospital
  • I. Shchederkina
    Morozov Children’s City Clinical Hospital
  • E. Bryksina
    Rostov State Medical University
  • P. Bogdan
    Pirogov Russian National Research Medical University (RNRMU)
  • N. Kolganova
    RUDN University
  • D. Sergeev
    Pirogov Russian National Research Medical University (RNRMU)
  • M. Zorina
    Pirogov Russian National Research Medical University (RNRMU)
  • E. Petryaykina
    RUDN University, Morozov Children’s City Clinical Hospital, Pirogov Russian National Research Medical University (RNRMU)
  • V. Gorev
    Morozov Children’s City Clinical Hospital
Название журнала
  • Pediatriya - Zhurnal im G.N. Speranskogo
Том
  • 99
Выпуск
  • 6
Страницы
  • 73-83
Финансирующая организация
  • RUDN University
Номер гранта
  • undefined
Тип документа
  • journal article
Тип лицензии Creative Commons
  • CC BY
Правовой статус документа
  • Свободная лицензия
Источник
  • scopus