| Literature DB >> 34287369 |
Pamela Paglia1, Lucia Nazzaro2, Anna Giulia Elena De Anseris2, Milena Lettieri1,3, Rossella Colantuono1, Maria Chiara Rocco1, Maria Anna Siano1, Nicola Biffaro1, Pietro Vajro1,2.
Abstract
Hypertransaminasemia in patients with Kawasaki disease (KD) is reported to be transient. Here, we describe a child with an atypically protracted course of liver tests abnormalities and review the inherent literature. The patient was hospitalized at age 7-months for isolated hypertransaminasemia detected during a classical KD diagnosed 3 months before, and persistent since then. KD clinical evolution had been favorable, with rapid response to acetylsalicylic acid and intravenous immunoglobulins. Liver enzymes however remained persistently elevated with a fluctuating pattern (ALT > AST levels; peak of AST 186 IU/L and ALT 240 IU/L). During follow-up, the main causes of liver dysfunction had to be excluded through appropriate and extensive laboratory investigations. Transaminases values become steadily normal only 7 months after the acute presentation of KD. Conclusions: Our report shows that an atypically protracted courses of KD-related hypertransaminasemia above the previously reported temporal limits should be taken into account during the stepwise diagnostic approach to the patient's liver dysfunction. Insidious acetylsalycilic acid-hepatotoxicity warrants consideration in the differential diagnosis.Entities:
Keywords: Kawasaki disease; case report; literature review; persistent hypertransaminasemia
Year: 2021 PMID: 34287369 PMCID: PMC8293418 DOI: 10.3390/pediatric13030044
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Rep ISSN: 2036-749X
Natural recovery time of liver enzymes abnormalities in Kawasaki disease.
| Author | Case Report/Case Series | Transaminases Values at Diagnosis | Recovery Time from Onset | Treatment with Acetylsalicylic Acid | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N; Gender; Age | AST IU/L | ALT IU/L | AST IU/L | ALT IU/L | ||
| 63 patients | >50 | >50 | 7 days (median); range 2–99 days | NR | ||
| 1 F | 17 | 42 | 4 months | 4 months | 500 mg three times a day during 10-days hospitalization and continued after discharge | |
| 199/381 patients (52.2%) | NR | (I) ALT ≥ 40 | AST, peaked on days 1–3 and tended to exhibit recovery on the 4th day of illness | ALT began to normalize on the 6th day of illness | 37/199 patients (18.6%) received aspirin at doses of 10–30 mg/kg/day | |
| 52/381patients (13.6%) | NR | (II) ALT ≥ 40 at some point | AST, peaked on 11th day and tended to exhibit recovery on 15th–17th day of illness | ALT decreased on 15th–17th days of illness | 10/52 patients (19.2%) received aspirin at doses of 10–30 mg/kg/day | |
| 1 M | 351 | 40 | Persistent elevation after 9 months (Macro-AST) | 2 weeks | 35 mg/kg/day divided q6h for 48 h from diagnosis and reduced after 36 h to 3 mg/kg once daily until 6 wk after illness onset | |
|
| 1M | 50 | 60 | AST peaked at week 3 (186 IU/L); tended to normalize at 6th-7th month | ALT peaked at week 3 (240 IU/L); tended to normalize at 6th–7th month | 80 mg/kg/day × 5 days then 3 mg/kg/day × total 8 weeks |
Abbreviations: ALT, alanine amino transaminase; AST, aspartate amino transaminase; Dx, Diagnosis; F, female; M, male; NR, not reported.
Figure 1Aminotransferases values after diagnosis of Kawasaki disease in our patient. Horizontal dashed lines indicate ALT and AST upper normal values for age [16]; the horizontal continuous red and green lines indicate treatment duration with acetylsalicylic acid at high and low doses, respectively. Abbreviations: ALT, alanine aminotransferase; AST, aspartate aminotransferase; Dx, diagnosis; KD, Kawasaki disease.