Juvenile onset Reiter's syndrome. A retrospective study of 26 patients.
Maneno muhimu
Kikemikali
Clinical, laboratory and radiological findings were evaluated in 26 children with Reiter's syndrome, all of whom met the 1982 diagnostic criteria of A. Calin. Twenty-two of the patients (85%) were male and 4 were female (15%); the mean age at onset was 10.5 years (range 4-15.5 yrs). Mean follow-up time was 28.6 months. Diarrhea prior to onset was observed in 18 cases (69%), but there was no report of venereal disease. The full classic triad was initially observed in only 9 patients (35%), urethritis alone in 6 (23%) and conjunctivitis alone in 4 (15%). Arthritis was present in all patients, with the lower limb joints involved in 25 cases (96%); the pattern was pauciarticular in 18 (69%), polyarticular in 7 (27%) and monoarticular in one (4%). There was complete remission in 15 out of the 26 patients (58%), while a sustained and fluctuating course was seen in 7 (27%) and 3 (11.5%) patients, respectively; a single patient showed a remitting course. Balanitis was present in 11 out of the 22 male (50%) cases. Twelve out of 18 patients tested (67%) proved to be HLA B27 positive and there was radiological evidence of sacroiliitis in 5 out of 24 patients (21%). Reiter's syndrome should be included in the differential diagnosis of the arthritic child. As a rule, the course of joint involvement is remittent and sequelae affecting functional capacity are indeed exceptional.