The complications of VZV infection occur with varicella, or with reactivation of infection, more commonly in immunocompromised patients. In the otherwise healthy child, mild varicella hepatitis is relatively common but rarely clinically symptomatic.

Mild thrombocytopenia occurs in 1–2% of children with varicella and may be associated with transient petechiae. Purpura, hemorrhagic vesicles, hematuria, and gastrointestinal bleeding are rare complications that may have serious consequences.

Cerebellar ataxia occurs in 1 in every 4,000 cases. Other complications of varicella, some of them rare, include encephalitis, pneumonia, nephritis, nephrotic syndrome, hemolytic-uremic syndrome, arthritis, myocarditis, pericarditis, pancreatitis, and orchitis.

Seconary Bacterial Infections.

Secondary bacterial infections of the skin, usually caused by group A streptococci and S. aureus, may occur in up to 5% of children with varicella. These range from superficial impetigo to cellulitis, lymphadenitis, and subcutaneous abscesses. An early manifestation of secondary bacterial infection is erythema of the base of a new vesicle. Recrudescence of fever 3–4 days after the initial exanthem may also herald a secondary bacterial infection. Varicella is a well-described risk factor for serious invasive infections caused by group A streptococcus, which can have a fatal outcome. The more invasive infections, such as varicella gangrenosa, bacterial sepsis, pneumonia Continue reading »

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As diabetes develops, symptoms steadily increase, reflecting the decreasing ?-cell mass, worsening insulinopenia, progressive hyperglycemia, and eventual ketoacidosis. Initially, when only insulin reserve is limited, occasional hyperglycemia occurs. When the serum glucose increases above the renal threshold, intermittent polyuria or nocturia begins. With further ?-cell loss, chronic hyperglycemia causes a more persistent diuresis, often with nocturnal enuresis, and polydipsia becomes more apparent. Female patients may develop monilial vaginitis due to the chronic glycosuria. Calories are lost in the urine (glycosuria), triggering a compensatory hyperphagia. If this hyperphagia does not keep pace with the glycosuria, loss of body fat ensues, with clinical weight loss and diminished subcutaneous fat stores.

An average, healthy 10-yr-old child consumes about 50% of 2,000 daily calories as carbohydrate. As that child becomes diabetic, daily losses of water and glucose may be 5 L and 250 g, respectively, representing 1,000 calories, or 50%, of the average daily caloric intake. Despite the child’s compensatory increased intake of food, the body starves because unused calories are lost in the urine.

When extremely low insulin levels are reached, keto acids accumulate. At this point, the child Continue reading »

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Hematologic abnormalities often reflect the degree of systemic or articular inflammation, with elevated white blood cell and platelet counts and decreased hemoglobin concentration and mean corpuscular volume. The ESR and CRP usually mirror these findings, along with elevated serum immunoglobulins. It is not unusual for the ESR to be normal in some children with chronic arthritis. Because platelets are an acute-phase reactant, a high ESR and neutropenia with a low platelet count may be a clue to leukemia as a cause of periarticular swelling and pain.

Elevated ANA titers are present in at least 40–85% of children with oligoarticular or polyarticular JRA, but are unusual in children with systemic-onset disease. ANA seropositivity is associated with increased risk for the development of chronic uveitis in a child with limited joint disease.

Rheumatoid-factor (RF) seropositivity may be associated with onset of polyarticular involvement in an older child (?8%) and the development of rheumatoid nodules, and with a poor overall prognosis with eventual functional disability. Both ANA and RF seropositivity occur in association with transient events during childhood, such as viral infections, particularly Epstein-Barr virus. Seropositivity for both ANA and RF must be defined at a specific titer in relation to accepted positive and negative controls and a laboratory-defined coefficient of variation.

Bone mineral metabolism and skeletal maturation are often abnormal in children with JRA with a history of active synovitis, relatively independent of onset type or course subtype, and predominantly affect appendicular cortical bone, with less effect on the normal age-related development of trabecular bone. Increased levels of cytokines such as IL-6 may decrease bone formation (reflected by decreased serum levels of osteocalcin and bone-specific alkaline phosphatase) to a greater extent than bone resorption (which may also be decreased, as reflected Continue reading »

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