Kawasaki disease historical perspective
Historical Perspective
The Historical data on Kawasaki is described below:[1][2][3][4][5][6]
- In 1961, Dr. Tomisaku Kawasaki saw his first case of Kawasaki disease.
- In 1967, Kawasaki published his first report of Kawasaki disease in Japanese.
- In 1960s, pathologist Noboru Tanaka and pediatrician Takajiro Yamamoto disputed the early assertion of Kawasaki that Kawasaki disease was a self-limited illness with no sequelae.
- In 1970, first Japanese nationwide survey of Kawasaki disease was conducted and 10 autopsy cases of sudden cardiac death after Kawasaki disease were documented.
- In 1973, at the University of Hawaii hospital, pathologist Eunice Larson, in collaboration with Benjamin Landing at the Los Angeles Children's Hospital, retrospectively established a diagnosis of Kawasaki disease in a 1971 autopsy case.
- In 1974, Tomisaku Kawasaki published the first English-language report of 50 patients with Kawasaki disease.
- By 1974, the link between Kawasaki disease and coronary artery vasuclitis was well established.
- In 1976, he first cases of Kawasaki disease outside of Japan were reported in Hawaii.
- In 1988, the Committee on infectious diseases of the American Academy of Pediatrics declared IVIG treatment as the recommended therapy for Kawasaki disease.
- In 2006 march, Kawasaki disease was mentioned in the television programs Nip/Tuck and Without a Trace In the episode All In of the TV series House, it was inexplicably mentioned as a possible diagnosis for a 6 year old boy that was admitted with bloody diarrhea and coordination problems, as well as an elderly woman with unexplained respiratory, cardiovascular and neural deficiencies. Maxie Jones, a fictional character on General Hospital suffers from it. According to John Travolta and Kelly Preston, their son Jett Travolta also suffers from the disease.
- ↑ Burns, Jane C.; Kushner, Howard I.; Bastian, John F.; Shike, Hiroko; Shimizu, Chisato; Matsubara, Tomoyo; Turner, Christena L. (2000). "Kawasaki Disease: A Brief History". Pediatrics. 106 (2): e27–e27. doi:10.1542/peds.106.2.e27. ISSN 0031-4005.
- ↑ Kawasaki Disease. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2013). http://www.cdc.gov/kawasaki/ Accessed on July 28, 2016.
- ↑ Kawasaki T (1967). "[Acute febrile mucocutaneous syndrome with lymphoid involvement with specific desquamation of the fingers and toes in children]". Arerugi (in Japanese)
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(help). 16 (3): 178–222. PMID 6062087. - ↑ Kawasaki T (1967). "[Acute febrile mucocutaneous syndrome with lymphoid involvement with specific desquamation of the fingers and toes in children]". Arerugi (in Japanese)
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(help). 16 (3): 178–222. PMID 6062087. - ↑ Episode 86 (4x16) - The Little Things (2 March, 2006)
- ↑ Kawasaki T (1967). "[Acute febrile mucocutaneous syndrome with lymphoid involvement with specific desquamation of the fingers and toes in children]". Arerugi (in Japanese)
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(help). 16 (3): 178–222. PMID 6062087.