Pediatr Blood Cancer
January 2008
A 6-year-old female was admitted with abdominal pain and a mass in the right abdomen. Her lactose dehydrogenase level was 1,200 IU/L, and neuron specific enolase was 120 ng/ml. Computed tomography scan confirmed a large right renal mass with necrosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The major complication of Kawasaki coronary disease is myocardial infarction caused by thrombus formation inside the aneurysm or by organic obstructive lesion following the regression of aneurysm, while the indications for surgical therapy remain controversial. We have adopted coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) even in young children for giant coronary aneurysms (more than 8 mm diameter) with or without a stenotic region when myocardial ischemia is detected. We hypothesized that a shorter time-period from diagnosis of acute Kawasaki disease (KD) to CABG would lead to better postoperative results.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA 7 year-old girl was admitted to our hospital with high grade fever and redness, swelling and tenderness in left neck. CT scan revealed cyst formation (4.5x3 cm) in left lobe of thyroid with swelling of surrounding lymphonodes.
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