Feature

Why doctors keep monitoring kids who recover from mysterious COVID-linked illness


 

An eye on the long-term effects

The medical team at Montefiore is tracking the 40 children they have already treated and discharged. With kids showing few symptoms in the immediate aftermath, Dr. Choueiter hopes the long-term trajectory after MIS-C will be similar to what happens after Kawasaki disease.

“Usually children who have had coronary artery dilations [from Kawasaki disease] that have resolved within the first 6 weeks of the illness do well long-term,” said Dr. Choueiter, who runs the Kawasaki disease program at Montefiore.

The Montefiore team is asking patients affected by MIS-C to return for a checkup 1 week after discharge, then after 1 month, 3 months, 6 months, and a year. They will be evaluated by pediatric cardiologists, hematologists, rheumatologists and infectious disease specialists.

Montefiore and other children’s hospitals around the country are sharing information. Dr. Choueiter wants to establish an even longer-term monitoring program for MIS-C, comparable with registries that exist for other diseases.

Ms. Moholland is glad the hospital is being vigilant.

“The uncertainty of not knowing whether it could come back in his future is a little unsettling,” she said. “But I am hopeful.”

This story is part of a partnership that includes WNYC, NPR, and Kaiser Health News. A version of this article originally appeared on Kaiser Health News.

Pages

Recommended Reading

The public’s trust in science
MDedge Family Medicine
Revisiting Xanax amid the coronavirus crisis
MDedge Family Medicine
COVID-19: A primary care perspective
MDedge Family Medicine
Guidance addresses elders with diabetes during COVID-19
MDedge Family Medicine
Provide support in uncertain times
MDedge Family Medicine
What have we learned from COVID?
MDedge Family Medicine
Proton pump inhibitors tied to COVID-19 risk
MDedge Family Medicine
COVID-19 pandemic dictates reconsideration of pemphigus therapy
MDedge Family Medicine
Doctors say their COVID-19 protocol saves lives; others want proof
MDedge Family Medicine
Stillbirth incidence increases during COVID-19 pandemic
MDedge Family Medicine