1.Kimura’s Disease: A Rare Cause of Chronic Lymphadenopathy in a Child
Latha Magatha Sneha ; Vinoth Ponnurangam Nagarajan ; Balaganesh Karmegaraj ; Shalini Rao ; Ravindran Manipriya ; Julius Xavier Scott
Malaysian Journal of Medical Sciences 2015;22(2):69-72
Kimura’s disease is an uncommon entity that affects adults, with a predilection for the Asian population. This may rarely be encountered in children, and the knowledge of this fact is essential to rule out the remote possibility of Kimura’s disease in children with a slow-growing painless mass in the head and neck region. In this case report, we document this disease in an 8-year-old boy with a slow-growing swelling in the right posterior auricular region.
2.A case of treatment-induced neuropathy in an adolescent with type 1 diabetes
Niranjana VARADHARAJU ; Dhivyalakshmi JEEVARATHNAM ; Mahalakshmi RAJAN ; Vinoth PONNURANGAM NAGARAJAN ; Saji JAMES
Annals of Pediatric Endocrinology & Metabolism 2019;24(3):203-206
Treatment-induced neuropathy (TIN) in diabetes is an acute and painful yet completely reversible small fiber neuropathy precipitated by a rapid improvement in glycemic control. TIN is rare in children. A 16-year-old girl developed symmetrical painful neuropathy of the foot, autonomic neuropathy, and retinopathy 5 weeks after the diagnosis of type 1 diabetes. All causative workups were negative except for a drop-in hemoglobin A(1c) (HbA(1c)) from 17.4% to 7%, which fit with a diagnosis of TIN. Following symptomatic management, her neuropathy and retinopathy completely resolved in 2 months. Currently, she is 18 years old and doing well (HbA(1c), 7.4%) without any recurrence of TIN. TIN should be suspected in any child presenting with recent-onset type 1 diabetes and acute onset neuropathy. Our case represents an unreported scenario of the rapid progression in TIN. Awareness among clinicians about this rare but completely reversible condition is necessary to ensure proper management and adherence to glycemic control.
Adolescent
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Child
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Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1
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Diagnosis
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Erythromelalgia
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Female
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Foot
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Humans
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Recurrence
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Tin