Selected article for: "bacterial infection and viral infection"

Author: Ueda, Yuki; Kenzaka, Tsuneaki; Noda, Ayako; Yamamoto, Yu; Matsumura, Masami
Title: Adult-onset Kawasaki disease (mucocutaneous lymph node syndrome) and concurrent Coxsackievirus A4 infection: a case report
  • Document date: 2015_9_29
  • ID: 019lkt6k_15
    Snippet: The etiology of KD remains unclear, although the clinical features suggest that a viral or bacterial infection may be a trigger. 11 KD has features similar to those of other childhood infectious diseases. For example, similar to measles and adenovirus infection, KD has the clinical features of fever and rash. The epidemiological features including age distribution, seasonal prevalence, and occurrence of community outbreaks with geographical sprea.....
    Document: The etiology of KD remains unclear, although the clinical features suggest that a viral or bacterial infection may be a trigger. 11 KD has features similar to those of other childhood infectious diseases. For example, similar to measles and adenovirus infection, KD has the clinical features of fever and rash. The epidemiological features including age distribution, seasonal prevalence, and occurrence of community outbreaks with geographical spread also suggest a transmissible childhood disease. 12 However, an infectious agent has not yet been identified. Adenovirus, herpesvirus, Epstein-Barr virus, human coronavirus New Haven, measles virus, rotavirus, dengue virus, and retrovirus are putative etiological agents of KD. These are commonly found pathogens. 13 However, the reason why only some patients infected with these viruses develop KD is unknown. A report demonstrated coinfection with Coxsackievirus B3 in a patient with KD. 13

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