Publication | Open Access
Delayed Diagnosis of Kawasaki Syndrome: An Analysis of the Problem
132
Citations
20
References
2005
Year
Diagnosis after the 10th day of illness was not linked to type of medical provider, number of antibiotics received, or number of physician visits. Patients in the DDG exhibited the typical features of KS, but the onset of their symptoms was dispersed over time as opposed to the close clustering of symptoms in the EDG. Because coronary artery aneurysms occurred significantly more often in the patients in the DDG, more education is needed to teach health care providers to have a high index of suspicion for KS in young children presenting with fever/rash illnesses.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1