Inflammatory disease linked to Covid-19 affecting SA children
WHO shows that the disease is likely linked to Covid-19 or previous exposure to it.
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South African children are currently experiencing a multi-system inflammatory syndrome that is associated with Covid-19. It is currently known as MIS-C or paediatric inflammatory multi-system syndrome.
23 children were admitted and treated in treated at The Red Cross War Memorial Children’s Hospital, Cape Town. According to the Lancet Report, “12 (52%) of the 23 children required admission to an intensive care unit, most commonly because of myocardial dysfunction”.
Also Read: WHO investigates link between multisystem inflammatory syndrome and Covid-19 in children
The research was conducted on all 23 children. 17 of them were boys, and six were girls. Black children were the majority (18), and four of the children had prenatal exposure to HIV. Other pre-existing conditions were identified, with obesity, leukaemia, and epilepsy being the main ones amongst the four children.
16 of the children had no previous exposure to Covid-19, and only three had confirmed exposure.
The major symptoms of MIS-C are:
- Fever
- Tachycardia (an abnormally rapid heart rate.)
- Rash
- Conjunctivitis (pink eye)
- Abdominal pain
- Diarrhoea
- Hypotension
- Arthritis
- Headache
MIS-C has not led to any deaths, and the children are being monitored, with no fear of any subsequent diseases caused by the current one.
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