Reye's syndrome

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Overview

Reye's syndrome
ICD-10 G93.7
ICD-9 331.81
DiseasesDB 11463
MedlinePlus 001565
eMedicine emerg/399 
MeSH C06.552.241.649

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Reye's syndrome is a potentially fatal disease that causes numerous detrimental effects to many organs, especially the brain and liver. It is associated with aspirin consumption by children with viral diseases such as chicken pox.

The disease causes fatty liver with minimal inflammation, and severe encephalopathy (with swelling of the brain). The liver may become slightly enlarged and firm, and there is a change in the appearance of the kidneys. Jaundice is not usually present.[1]

Early diagnosis is vital, otherwise death or severe brain damage may follow.

Causes

The precise mechanism by which Reye's syndrome occurs remains unknown. This serious illness is referred to as a “syndrome” because the clinical features that physicians use to diagnose it are quite broad. However, the major form of Reye’s syndrome reported in the United States is characteristically preceded by a viral-like flu illness or chickenpox. Many studies have demonstrated a strong association between aspirin taken for these viral illnesses and the development of Reye’s syndrome. Some studies indicate that a significant percentage of cases, particularly in very young children, are later re-categorized as other disorders or conditions -- as high as 25% in the UK and 50% in Australia. These re-categorized disorders, unlike the characteristic Reye’s syndrome, are not strongly linked to exposure to aspirin.

At least five epidemiologic studies published in US medical journals,[2] including one study that was supported by funds from the aspirin industry,[3] have confirmed an association between the development of Reye's syndrome and the use of aspirin (a salicylate compound) for treating the symptoms of influenza-like illnesses or chicken pox.[2] The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the U.S. Surgeon General, the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) and the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) recommend that aspirin and combination products containing aspirin not be given to children under 19 years of age during episodes of fever-causing illnesses. Acetylsalicylate is another word for aspirin; some medicine labels may use the words acetylsalicylate or acetylsalicylic acid instead of the word aspirin. Investigators at CDC have also cautioned against the use of medicines, including some anti-nausea medications that contain salicylic acid, or salicylate. A doctor or pharmacist should be consulted before any child or teenager under 19 years of age is given any medication containing aspirin (acetylsalicylate, salicylate, acetylsalicylic acid, or salicylic acid).

The vast majority of children who take aspirin while ill with a virus such as chicken pox or flu do not develop Reye's syndrome and some children who are diagnosed with the syndrome may not have taken aspirin or salicylates. Misdiagnoses of metabolic disorders that present with Reye’s Syndrome-like signs and symptoms, unreported exposures to aspirin, and possible other causes of the syndrome often account for these patients diagnosed with Reye’s syndrome but apparently unexposed to salicylates.

The serious symptoms of Reye's syndrome appear to result from damage to cellular mitochondria, at least in the liver, and there are a number of ways that aspirin could cause or exacerbate mitochondrial damage. An increased risk of contracting Reye's syndrome is one of the main reasons that aspirin has not been recommended for use in children and teenagers, the age group for which the risk of lasting serious effects is highest.

History

The syndrome is named after Dr R. Douglas Reye, who, along with fellow Australians Dr. Graeme Morgan and Dr. Jim Baral, published the first study of the syndrome in 1963 in the British medical journal called The Lancet.[4] In retrospect, the occurrence of the syndrome may have first been reported in 1929. Also in 1963, Dr. George Johnson and colleagues published an investigation of an outbreak of influenza B that described 16 children who developed neurological problems, four of whom had a remarkably similar profile to Reye’s syndrome. Some investigators refer to this disorder as Reye-Johnson syndrome, although it is more commonly called Reye's syndrome. During the late 1970s and early 1980s, studies in Ohio, Michigan and Arizona[2] pointed to the use of aspirin during an upper respiratory tract or chicken pox infection as a possible trigger of the syndrome. Beginning in 1980, the CDC cautioned physicians and parents about the association between Reye’s syndrome and the use of salicylates in children and teenagers with chickenpox or virus-like illnesses. In 1982 the US Surgeon General issued an advisory and in 1986 the Food and Drug Administration required a Reye’s syndrome-related warning label for all aspirin-containing medications.

Presentation

Symptoms and signs

Reye's syndrome progresses through five stages, explained below:

  • Stage I
  • Stage II
  • Stage III
    • Continuation of Stage I and II symptoms
    • Possible coma
    • Possible cerebral edema
    • Rarely, respiratory arrest
  • Stage IV
    • Deepening coma
    • Large pupils with minimal response to light
    • Minimal but still present hepatic dysfunction
  • Stage V
    • Very rapid onset following stage IV
    • Deep coma
    • Seizures
    • Respiratory failure
    • Flaccidity
    • Extremely high blood ammonia (above 300mg per 100mL of blood)
    • Death

Prognosis

Documented cases of Reye’s syndrome in adults have only been very rarely reported. The recovery of adults with the syndrome is generally complete, with liver and brain function returning to normal within two weeks of the illness. In children however, mild to severe permanent brain damage is possible, especially in infants. Over thirty percent of the cases reported in the United States from 1981 through 1997 died.

Differential diagnosis

Causes for similar symptoms include

Epidemiology

Reye’s syndrome occurs almost exclusively in children although it has been reported to occur in adults. However, adults do not appear to be as vulnerable to permanent neural or liver damage. Unlike in the UK and Australia, the surveillance for Reye’s syndrome in the US is focused on patients under 18 years of age.

In 1980, after CDC began cautioning physicians and parents about the association between Reye’s syndrome and the use of salicylates in children with chickenpox or virus-like illnesses, the incidence of Reye's syndrome in the United States began to decline. In the United States between 1980 and 1997, the number of reported cases of Reye’s syndrome decreased from 555 cases in 1980 to about 2 cases per year since 1994. During this time period 93% of reported cases for which racial data were available occurred in whites and the median age was six years. A viral illness occurred in 93% of cases in the preceding three week period. For the period 1991-1994, the annual rate of hospitalizations due to Reye’s syndrome in the US was estimated to be between 0.2 and 1.1 per million population less than 18 years of age.

During the 1980s, a case-control study carried out in the United Kingdom also demonstrated an associate between Reye’s syndrome and aspirin exposure.[5] In June 1986, the United Kingdom Committee on Safety of Medicines issued warnings against the use of aspirin in children under 12 years of age and warning labels on aspirin-containing medications were introduced. UK surveillance for Reye’s syndrome documented a decline in the incidence of Reye’s syndrome following 1986. The reported incidence rate of Reye’s syndrome decreased from a high of 0.63 per 100,000 population less than 12 years of age in 1983/84 to 0.11 in 1990/91.

From November 1995 to November 1996 in France, a national survey of pediatric departments for children under 15 years of age with unexplained encephalopathy and a three fold (or greater) increase in serum aminotransferase and/or ammonia led to the identification of nine definite cases of Reye’s syndrome (0.79 cases per million children). Eight of the nine children with Reye’s syndrome were found to have been exposed to aspirin. In part because of this survey result, the French Medicines Agency reinforced the international attention to the relationship between aspirin and Reye’s syndrome by issuing its own public and professional warnings about this relationship.[6]

Footnotes

  1. Suchy, FJ, el al.; Sokol, RJ; Balistreri, WF (2007). Liver Disease in Children. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-5218-5657-4.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Mortimer EA (1987). "Reye's syndrome, salicylates, epidemiology, and public health policy". JAMA. 257 (14): 941. PMID 3820516.
  3. Forsyth BW, Horwitz RI, Acampora D; et al. (1989). "New epidemiologic evidence confirming that bias does not explain the aspirin/Reye's syndrome association". JAMA. 261 (17): 2517–24. PMID 2704111.
  4. Reye RD, Morgan G, Baral J (1963). "Encephalopathy and fatty degeneration of the viscera. A Disease entity in childhood". Lancet. 2: 749–52. PMID 14055046.
  5. Hall SM, Plaster PA, Glasgow JF, Hancock P (1988). "Preadmission antipyretics in Reye's syndrome". Arch. Dis. Child. 63 (7): 857–66. PMID 3415311.
  6. Autret-Leca E, Jonville-Béra AP, Llau ME; et al. (2001). "Incidence of Reye's syndrome in France: a hospital-based survey". Journal of clinical epidemiology. 54 (8): 857–62. PMID 11470397.

References

  • Autret-Leca E, Jonville-Bera AP, Llau ME, et al. Incidence of Reye’s syndrome in France: a hospital-based survey. J Clin Eoidemiolo 2001; 54:857-862.
  • Belay ED, Bresee JS, Holman RC, et al. Reye’s syndrome in the United States from 1981 through 1997. NEJM 1999;340(18)1377-1382.
  • Forsyth BW, Horwitz RI, Acampora D, et al. New epidemiologic evidence confirming that bias does not explain the aspirin/Reye’s syndrome association. JAMA. 1989;261:2517-2524.
  • Hall SM, Plaster PA, Glasgow JFT, Hancock P. Preadmission antipyretics in Reye’s syndrome. Arch Dis Child 1988;63:857-866.
  • Hurwitz ES, Barrett MJ, Bergman D, et al. Public Health Service study of Reye’s syndrome and medications: Report of the main study. JAMA 1987;257:1905-1911.
  • Johnson GM, Scurletis TD, Carroll NB. A study of sixteen fatal cases of encephalitis-like disease in North Carolina children. N C Med J 1963;24:464-73.
  • Kauffman RE. (Reye's syndrome and salicylate use, by Karen M. Starko, MD, et al, Pediatrics, 1980;66:859-864; and National patterns of aspirin use and Reye syndrome reporting, United States, 1980 to 1985, by Janet B. Arrowsmith et al, Pediatrics, 1987;79:858-863.) 1998. Pediatrics 102:259-262.
  • “Labeling for oral and rectal over-the-counter drug products containing aspirin and nonaspirin salicylates; Reye’s syndrome warning, Final Rule.” Federal Register 68 (17 April 2003):18861-18869.
  • Mortimer EA. Reye’s syndrome, salicylates, epidemiology, and public health policy. JAMA 1987;257(14):1941.
  • Reye RDK, Morgan G, Basal J. Encephalopathy and fatty degeneration of the viscera. A disease entity in childhood. Lancet 1963;2:749-52.
  • Suchy Frederick J., Ronald J. Sokol, William F. Balistreri (eds), 2007, Liver Disease in Children, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0521856574
  • Sullivan KM, Belay ED, Durbin RE, et al. Epidemiology of Reye’s syndrome, United States, 1991-1994: Comparison of CDC surveillance and hospital admission data. Neruoepidemiology 2000;19:338-344.
  • Surgeon General’s advisory on the use of salicylates and Reye syndrome. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 1982;31:289-90.

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