Clues to the origins of a mysterious childhood disease may be blowing in the wind. Kawasaki Disease is rare, and its characteristic prolonged fever is often mistaken for a mild viral infection. But it’s actually an inflammation of the blood vessels that can cause damage to the heart, sometimes despite treatment. The cause of the disease, which strikes kids in Japan far more frequently than in other countries and is most often seen in the U.S. in Asian- and African-Americans, isn’t known. The thought is that there’s some genetic predisposition to KD, and then some environmental trigger that brings on the disease in susceptible kids. Now a new study finds the ebb and flow of Kawasaki cases is correlated with a wind that blows only at certain times of the year, starting in central Asia and heading south and east across Siberia, Korea and Japan before crossing the Pacific Ocean and hitting the U.S. west coast. Jane Burns, an author of the new research and a professor of pediatrics and director of the Kawasaki Disease Research Center at U.C. San Diego and Rady Children’s Hospital-San Diego, tells the Health Blog the pattern seen in KD cases is unlike other diseases such as the flu. Cases mount during the late fall and first of the year, peaking in March, then ease off. There’s a second mini-peak during the summer and then the number of cases hits a nadir in September and October, she says. She sees 15 to 17 new cases a month during peak season and only one to two during the trough. The research, published in
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Are Clues to Kawasaki Disease Blowing In the Wind?


John


