Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia Type L1
We report a case of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) with both acute myeloid leukemia 1 (AML1) amplification and 17q25 deletion. AML1 gene is located on 21q22 and encodes a transcription factor. AML1 amplification is a common finding in childhood ALL, and itis observed as an increase in gene copy number by[…][ncbi.nlm.nih.gov]
Varicella
Chickenpox is common and mostly affects children, although you can get it at any age. It usually gets better by itself within a week without needing to see a GP. Check if it's chickenpox Credit: Hercules Robinson / Alamy Stock Photo 1. Chickenpox starts with red spots. They can appear anywhere on the body. Credit:[…][nhs.uk]
Rubella
Deutsch: Röteln sind eine hochansteckende Infektionskrankheit, die durch das Röteln-Virus hervorgerufen wird. Sie gehören zu den klassischen Kinderkrankheiten. Eine Infektion während der Schwangerschaft kann allerdings schwerwiegende Folgen für das ungeborene Kind haben. Bei diesem kann die Infektion zu[…][commons.wikimedia.org]
African Trypanosomiasis
African trypanosomiasisis an illness endemic to sub-Saharan, also called African Sleeping Sickness. With T. b. rhodesiense, symptoms are seen within 1-3 weeks of the infective bite and the symptoms include high fever, chancre at the site of penetration, skin rash, headache, thrombocytopenia, myalgia and on rare[…][symptoma.com]
Viral Exanthem
Tender suboccipital, posterior cervical, and postauricular adenopathy are common.[ahcmedia.com]
Congenital Rubella Syndrome
, suboccipital adenopathy, post-auricular adenopathy, arthralgia, or arthritis [ 17, 18 ].[ncbi.nlm.nih.gov]
[…] definition for possible cases and comprises any person with sudden onset of generalised maculopapular rash and at least one of the following five manifestations: cervical adenopathy[ncbi.nlm.nih.gov]
Neonatal Inflammatory Skin and Bowel Disease 2
Rubella: – Rash resembles measles, but patient is not ill looking – Prominent postauricular, posterior cervical /- suboccipital adenopathy – Forschemier spots: small, red[learn.pediatrics.ubc.ca]