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Reye syndrome

Reye syndrome is a rapidly worsening brain disease.[2] Symptoms of Reye syndrome may include vomiting, personality changes, confusion, seizures, and loss of consciousness.[1] While liver toxicity typically occurs in the syndrome, jaundice usually does not.[2] Death occurs in 20–40% of those affected with Reye syndrome, and about a third of those who survive are left with a significant degree of brain damage.[2][3]

Reye syndrome
Other namesReye's syndrome
Appearance of a liver from a child who died of Reye syndrome as seen with a microscope. Hepatocytes are pale-staining due to intracellular fat droplets.
Pronunciation
SpecialtyPediatrics
SymptomsVomiting, personality changes, confusion, seizures, loss of consciousness[1]
ComplicationsPersistent vegetative state, coma
CausesUnknown[2]
Risk factorsAspirin use in children, viral infection[1][2]
TreatmentSupportive care[1]
MedicationMannitol[2]
Prognosis1/3 long term disability[2][3]
FrequencyLess than one in a million children a year[2]
Deaths~30% chance of death[2][3]

The cause of Reye syndrome is unknown.[2] It usually begins shortly after recovery from a viral infection, such as influenza or chickenpox.[1] About 90% of cases in children are associated with aspirin (salicylate) use.[2] Inborn errors of metabolism are also a risk factor.[3] The syndrome is associated with changes on blood tests such as a high blood ammonia level, low blood sugar level, and prolonged prothrombin time.[2] Often, the liver is enlarged in the syndrome.[2]

Prevention is typically by avoiding the use of aspirin in children.[1] When aspirin was withdrawn for use in children in the US and UK in the 1980s, a decrease of more than 90% in rates of Reye syndrome was seen.[2] Early diagnosis of the syndrome improves outcomes.[1] Treatment is supportive;[1] mannitol may be used to help with the brain swelling.[2]

The first detailed description of Reye syndrome was in 1963 by Australian pathologist Douglas Reye.[4] The syndrome most commonly affects children.[2] It affects fewer than one in a million children a year.[2] The general recommendation to use aspirin in children was withdrawn because of Reye syndrome, with use only recommended in Kawasaki disease.[3]

Signs and symptoms

Reye syndrome progresses through five stages:[5][6][7][8]

Causes

The cause of Reye syndrome is unknown.[2] It usually begins shortly after recovery from a viral infection, such as influenza or chickenpox.[1] About 90% of cases in children are associated with aspirin (salicylate) use.[2] Inborn errors of metabolism are also a risk factor.[3]

The association with aspirin has been shown through epidemiological studies. The diagnosis of Reye syndrome greatly decreased in the 1980s, when genetic testing for inborn errors of metabolism was becoming available in developed countries.[11] A retrospective study of 49 survivors of cases diagnosed as Reye syndrome showed that the majority of the surviving patients had various metabolic disorders, particularly a fatty-acid oxidation disorder medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency.[12]

Aspirin

There is an association between taking aspirin for viral illnesses and the development of Reye syndrome,[13] but no animal model of Reye syndrome has been developed in which aspirin causes the condition.[11]

The serious symptoms of Reye syndrome appear to result from damage to cellular mitochondria,[14] at least in the liver, and there is a number of ways that aspirin could cause or exacerbate mitochondrial damage. A potential increased risk of developing Reye 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.[citation needed]

In some countries, oral mouthcare product Bonjela (not the form specifically designed for teething) has labeling cautioning against its use in children, given its salicylate content. There have been no cases of Reye syndrome following its use, and the measure is a precaution.[15] Other medications containing salicylates are often similarly labeled as a precaution.[citation needed]

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. Hence, in the United States, it is advised that the opinion of a doctor or pharmacist should be obtained before anyone under 19 years of age is given any medication containing aspirin (also known on some medicine labels as acetylsalicylate, salicylate, acetylsalicylic acid, ASA, or salicylic acid).[citation needed]

Current advice in the United Kingdom by the Committee on Safety of Medicines is that aspirin should not be given to those under the age of 16 years, unless specifically indicated in Kawasaki disease or in the prevention of blood clot formation.[16]

Diagnosis

Differential diagnosis

Causes for similar symptoms include[citation needed]

Treatment

Treatment is supportive.[1] Mannitol may be used to help with the brain swelling.[2]

Prognosis

Documented cases of Reye syndrome in adults are rare. The recovery of adults with the syndrome is generally complete, with liver and brain function returning to normal within two weeks of onset.[citation needed]

In children, 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 resulted in fatality.[citation needed]

Epidemiology

Reye syndrome occurs almost exclusively in children. While a few adult cases have been reported over the years, these cases do not typically show permanent neural or liver damage. Unlike in the United Kingdom, the surveillance for Reye syndrome in the United States is focused on people under 18 years of age.[citation needed]

In 1980, after the CDC began cautioning physicians and parents about the association between Reye syndrome and the use of salicylates in children with chickenpox or virus-like illnesses, the incidence of Reye syndrome in the United States began to decline, prior to the FDA's issue of warning labels on aspirin in 1986.[11] In the United States between 1980 and 1997, the number of reported cases of Reye syndrome decreased from 555 cases in 1980 to about two 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. In 93% of cases a viral illness had occurred in the preceding three-week period. For the period 1991–1994, the annual rate of hospitalizations due to Reye syndrome in the United States was estimated to be between 0.2 and 1.1 per million population less than 18 years of age.[citation needed]

During the 1980s, a case-control study carried out in the United Kingdom also demonstrated an association between Reye syndrome and aspirin exposure.[17] 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. United Kingdom surveillance for Reye syndrome documented a decline in the incidence of the illness after 1986. The reported incidence rate of Reye syndrome decreased from a high of 0.63 per 100,000 population less than 12 years of age in 1983–1984 to 0.11 in 1990–1991.[citation needed]

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 threefold (or greater) increase in serum aminotransferase and/or ammonia led to the identification of nine definite cases of Reye syndrome (0.79 cases per million children). Eight of the nine children with Reye 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 syndrome by issuing its own public and professional warnings about this relationship.[18]

History

The syndrome is named after Douglas Reye, who, along with fellow physicians Graeme Morgan and Jim Baral, published the first study of the syndrome in 1963 in The Lancet.[19] In retrospect, the occurrence of the syndrome may have first been reported in 1929. Also in 1964, 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 profile remarkably similar to Reye syndrome. Some investigators refer to this disorder as Reye-Johnson syndrome, although it is more commonly called Reye syndrome. In 1979, Karen Starko and colleagues conducted a case-control study in Phoenix, Arizona, and found the first statistically significant link between aspirin use and Reye syndrome.[20] Studies in Ohio and Michigan soon confirmed her findings[21] pointing to the use of aspirin during an upper respiratory tract or chickenpox infection as a possible trigger of the syndrome. Beginning in 1980, the CDC cautioned physicians and parents about the association between Reye syndrome and the use of salicylates in children and teenagers with chickenpox or virus-like illnesses. In 1982 the U.S. Surgeon General issued an advisory, and in 1986 the Food and Drug Administration required a Reye syndrome-related warning label for all aspirin-containing medications.[22]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j . NINDS. September 25, 2009. Archived from the original on August 1, 2016. Retrieved August 8, 2016.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Pugliese, A; Beltramo, T; Torre, D (October 2008). "Reye's and Reye's-like syndromes". Cell Biochemistry and Function. 26 (7): 741–6. doi:10.1002/cbf.1465. PMID 18711704. S2CID 22361194.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Schrör, K (2007). "Aspirin and Reye syndrome: a review of the evidence". Paediatric Drugs. 9 (3): 195–204. doi:10.2165/00148581-200709030-00008. PMID 17523700. S2CID 58727745.
  4. ^ McMillan, Julia A.; Feigin, Ralph D.; DeAngelis, Catherine; Jones, M. Douglas (2006). Oski's Pediatrics: Principles & Practice. Philadelphia: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. p. 2306. ISBN 9780781738941. from the original on August 15, 2016.
  5. ^ Knight, J. (2009). . Healthy Child Care. 12 (4). Archived from the original on May 22, 2013.
  6. ^ Boldt, D.W. (February 2003). "Reye Syndrome". University of Hawaii John A. Burns School of Medicine. from the original on March 6, 2013.
  7. ^ "What is Reye's Syndrome?". National Reye's Syndrome Foundation. 1974. from the original on May 11, 2013.
  8. ^ "Chapter XVIII.17. Reye Syndrome". Case Based Pediatrics for Medical Students and Residents. Retrieved February 18, 2023.
  9. ^ "Reye's Syndrome". KidsHealth.org. Nemour Foundation. from the original on February 6, 2015. Retrieved February 6, 2015.
  10. ^ Ku AS, Chan LT (April 1999). "The first case of H5N1 avian influenza infection in a human with complications of adult respiratory distress syndrome and Reye's syndrome". Journal of Paediatrics and Child Health. 35 (2): 207–9. doi:10.1046/j.1440-1754.1999.t01-1-00329.x. PMID 10365363. S2CID 7985883.
  11. ^ a b c Orlowski JP, Hanhan UA, Fiallos MR (2002). "Is aspirin a cause of Reye's syndrome? A case against". Drug Safety. 25 (4): 225–31. doi:10.2165/00002018-200225040-00001. PMID 11994026. S2CID 20552758.
  12. ^ Orlowski JP (August 1999). "Whatever happened to Reye's syndrome? Did it ever really exist?". Critical Care Medicine. 27 (8): 1582–7. doi:10.1097/00003246-199908000-00032. PMID 10470768.
  13. ^ Hurwitz, E. S. (1989). "Reye's syndrome". Epidemiologic Reviews. 11: 249–253. doi:10.1093/oxfordjournals.epirev.a036043. PMID 2680560.
  14. ^ Gosalakkal JA, Kamoji V (September 2008). "Reye syndrome and reye-like syndrome". Pediatric Neurology. 39 (3): 198–200. doi:10.1016/j.pediatrneurol.2008.06.003. PMID 18725066.
  15. ^ (Press release). Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency. April 23, 2009. Archived from the original on April 26, 2009. Retrieved May 1, 2009.
  16. ^ "2.9 Antiplatelet drugs". British National Formulary for Children. British Medical Association and Royal Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain. 2007. p. 151.
  17. ^ Hall SM, Plaster PA, Glasgow JF, Hancock P (1988). "Preadmission antipyretics in Reye's syndrome". Arch. Dis. Child. 63 (7): 857–66. doi:10.1136/adc.63.7.857. PMC 1779086. PMID 3415311.
  18. ^ 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. doi:10.1016/S0895-4356(00)00366-8. PMID 11470397.
  19. ^ Reye RD, Morgan G, Baral J (1963). "Encephalopathy and fatty degeneration of the viscera. A Disease entity in childhood". Lancet. 2 (7311): 749–52. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(63)90554-3. PMID 14055046.
  20. ^ Starko KM, Ray CG, Dominguez LB, Stromberg WL, Woodall DF (December 1980). "Reye's syndrome and salicylate use". Pediatrics. 66 (6): 859–864. doi:10.1542/peds.66.6.859. PMID 7454476. S2CID 41712701.
  21. ^ Mortimor, Edward A. Jr.; et al. (June 1, 1980). "Reye Syndrome-Ohio, Michigan". Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. 69 (29): 532, 810–2. PMID 7079050. from the original on June 11, 2008.
  22. ^ "Aspirin Labels to Warn About Reye Syndrome". The New York Times. Associated Press. March 8, 1986. from the original on March 5, 2016.

External links

  • NINDS Reye's Syndrome Information Page

reye, syndrome, rapidly, worsening, brain, disease, symptoms, include, vomiting, personality, changes, confusion, seizures, loss, consciousness, while, liver, toxicity, typically, occurs, syndrome, jaundice, usually, does, death, occurs, those, affected, with,. Reye syndrome is a rapidly worsening brain disease 2 Symptoms of Reye syndrome may include vomiting personality changes confusion seizures and loss of consciousness 1 While liver toxicity typically occurs in the syndrome jaundice usually does not 2 Death occurs in 20 40 of those affected with Reye syndrome and about a third of those who survive are left with a significant degree of brain damage 2 3 Reye syndromeOther namesReye s syndromeAppearance of a liver from a child who died of Reye syndrome as seen with a microscope Hepatocytes are pale staining due to intracellular fat droplets Pronunciation r aɪ ˈ s ɪ n d r oʊ m rye SIN drohmSpecialtyPediatricsSymptomsVomiting personality changes confusion seizures loss of consciousness 1 ComplicationsPersistent vegetative state comaCausesUnknown 2 Risk factorsAspirin use in children viral infection 1 2 TreatmentSupportive care 1 MedicationMannitol 2 Prognosis1 3 long term disability 2 3 FrequencyLess than one in a million children a year 2 Deaths 30 chance of death 2 3 The cause of Reye syndrome is unknown 2 It usually begins shortly after recovery from a viral infection such as influenza or chickenpox 1 About 90 of cases in children are associated with aspirin salicylate use 2 Inborn errors of metabolism are also a risk factor 3 The syndrome is associated with changes on blood tests such as a high blood ammonia level low blood sugar level and prolonged prothrombin time 2 Often the liver is enlarged in the syndrome 2 Prevention is typically by avoiding the use of aspirin in children 1 When aspirin was withdrawn for use in children in the US and UK in the 1980s a decrease of more than 90 in rates of Reye syndrome was seen 2 Early diagnosis of the syndrome improves outcomes 1 Treatment is supportive 1 mannitol may be used to help with the brain swelling 2 The first detailed description of Reye syndrome was in 1963 by Australian pathologist Douglas Reye 4 The syndrome most commonly affects children 2 It affects fewer than one in a million children a year 2 The general recommendation to use aspirin in children was withdrawn because of Reye syndrome with use only recommended in Kawasaki disease 3 Contents 1 Signs and symptoms 2 Causes 2 1 Aspirin 3 Diagnosis 3 1 Differential diagnosis 4 Treatment 5 Prognosis 6 Epidemiology 7 History 8 References 9 External linksSigns and symptoms EditReye syndrome progresses through five stages 5 6 7 8 Stage I Vasoconstrictive rash on palms of hands and feet Persistent heavy vomiting that is not relieved by not eating Generalized lethargy Confusion Nightmares possible symptom No fever usually present 9 Headaches Stage II Deep lethargy Delirium Confusion Combative behavior Stupor Hyperventilation Fatty liver found on biopsy Hyperactive reflexes Stage III Continuation of Stage I and II symptoms Possible coma Possible cerebral edema Possible seizures Rarely respiratory arrest Decorticate posturing Stage IV Seizures Decerebrate posturing Deepening coma Dilated pupils with minimal response to light Loss of oculocephalic reflexes Minimal but still present liver dysfunction Stage V Very rapid onset following stage IV Areflexia Deep coma Dilated nonreactive pupils Isoelectric EEG Respiratory arrest Seizures Multiple organ failure 10 Flaccidity Hyperammonemia above 300 mg dL of blood DeathCauses EditThe cause of Reye syndrome is unknown 2 It usually begins shortly after recovery from a viral infection such as influenza or chickenpox 1 About 90 of cases in children are associated with aspirin salicylate use 2 Inborn errors of metabolism are also a risk factor 3 The association with aspirin has been shown through epidemiological studies The diagnosis of Reye syndrome greatly decreased in the 1980s when genetic testing for inborn errors of metabolism was becoming available in developed countries 11 A retrospective study of 49 survivors of cases diagnosed as Reye syndrome showed that the majority of the surviving patients had various metabolic disorders particularly a fatty acid oxidation disorder medium chain acyl CoA dehydrogenase deficiency 12 Aspirin Edit There is an association between taking aspirin for viral illnesses and the development of Reye syndrome 13 but no animal model of Reye syndrome has been developed in which aspirin causes the condition 11 The serious symptoms of Reye syndrome appear to result from damage to cellular mitochondria 14 at least in the liver and there is a number of ways that aspirin could cause or exacerbate mitochondrial damage A potential increased risk of developing Reye 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 citation needed In some countries oral mouthcare product Bonjela not the form specifically designed for teething has labeling cautioning against its use in children given its salicylate content There have been no cases of Reye syndrome following its use and the measure is a precaution 15 Other medications containing salicylates are often similarly labeled as a precaution citation needed 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 Hence in the United States it is advised that the opinion of a doctor or pharmacist should be obtained before anyone under 19 years of age is given any medication containing aspirin also known on some medicine labels as acetylsalicylate salicylate acetylsalicylic acid ASA or salicylic acid citation needed Current advice in the United Kingdom by the Committee on Safety of Medicines is that aspirin should not be given to those under the age of 16 years unless specifically indicated in Kawasaki disease or in the prevention of blood clot formation 16 Diagnosis EditDifferential diagnosis Edit Causes for similar symptoms include citation needed Various inborn metabolic disorders Viral encephalitis Drug overdose or poisoning Head trauma Liver failure due to other causes Meningitis Kidney failure Shaken baby syndromeTreatment EditTreatment is supportive 1 Mannitol may be used to help with the brain swelling 2 Prognosis EditDocumented cases of Reye syndrome in adults are rare The recovery of adults with the syndrome is generally complete with liver and brain function returning to normal within two weeks of onset citation needed In children 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 resulted in fatality citation needed Epidemiology EditReye syndrome occurs almost exclusively in children While a few adult cases have been reported over the years these cases do not typically show permanent neural or liver damage Unlike in the United Kingdom the surveillance for Reye syndrome in the United States is focused on people under 18 years of age citation needed In 1980 after the CDC began cautioning physicians and parents about the association between Reye syndrome and the use of salicylates in children with chickenpox or virus like illnesses the incidence of Reye syndrome in the United States began to decline prior to the FDA s issue of warning labels on aspirin in 1986 11 In the United States between 1980 and 1997 the number of reported cases of Reye syndrome decreased from 555 cases in 1980 to about two 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 In 93 of cases a viral illness had occurred in the preceding three week period For the period 1991 1994 the annual rate of hospitalizations due to Reye syndrome in the United States was estimated to be between 0 2 and 1 1 per million population less than 18 years of age citation needed During the 1980s a case control study carried out in the United Kingdom also demonstrated an association between Reye syndrome and aspirin exposure 17 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 United Kingdom surveillance for Reye syndrome documented a decline in the incidence of the illness after 1986 The reported incidence rate of Reye syndrome decreased from a high of 0 63 per 100 000 population less than 12 years of age in 1983 1984 to 0 11 in 1990 1991 citation needed 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 threefold or greater increase in serum aminotransferase and or ammonia led to the identification of nine definite cases of Reye syndrome 0 79 cases per million children Eight of the nine children with Reye 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 syndrome by issuing its own public and professional warnings about this relationship 18 History EditThe syndrome is named after Douglas Reye who along with fellow physicians Graeme Morgan and Jim Baral published the first study of the syndrome in 1963 in The Lancet 19 In retrospect the occurrence of the syndrome may have first been reported in 1929 Also in 1964 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 profile remarkably similar to Reye syndrome Some investigators refer to this disorder as Reye Johnson syndrome although it is more commonly called Reye syndrome In 1979 Karen Starko and colleagues conducted a case control study in Phoenix Arizona and found the first statistically significant link between aspirin use and Reye syndrome 20 Studies in Ohio and Michigan soon confirmed her findings 21 pointing to the use of aspirin during an upper respiratory tract or chickenpox infection as a possible trigger of the syndrome Beginning in 1980 the CDC cautioned physicians and parents about the association between Reye syndrome and the use of salicylates in children and teenagers with chickenpox or virus like illnesses In 1982 the U S Surgeon General issued an advisory and in 1986 the Food and Drug Administration required a Reye syndrome related warning label for all aspirin containing medications 22 References Edit a b c d e f g h i j NINDS Reye s Syndrome Information Page NINDS September 25 2009 Archived from the original on August 1 2016 Retrieved August 8 2016 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Pugliese A Beltramo T Torre D October 2008 Reye s and Reye s like syndromes Cell Biochemistry and Function 26 7 741 6 doi 10 1002 cbf 1465 PMID 18711704 S2CID 22361194 a b c d e f Schror K 2007 Aspirin and Reye syndrome a review of the evidence Paediatric Drugs 9 3 195 204 doi 10 2165 00148581 200709030 00008 PMID 17523700 S2CID 58727745 McMillan Julia A Feigin Ralph D DeAngelis Catherine Jones M Douglas 2006 Oski s Pediatrics Principles amp Practice Philadelphia Lippincott Williams amp Wilkins p 2306 ISBN 9780781738941 Archived from the original on August 15 2016 Knight J 2009 Reye s Syndrome Healthy Child Care 12 4 Archived from the original on May 22 2013 Boldt D W February 2003 Reye Syndrome University of Hawaii John A Burns School of Medicine Archived from the original on March 6 2013 What is Reye s Syndrome National Reye s Syndrome Foundation 1974 Archived from the original on May 11 2013 Chapter XVIII 17 Reye Syndrome Case Based Pediatrics for Medical Students and Residents Retrieved February 18 2023 Reye s Syndrome KidsHealth org Nemour Foundation Archived from the original on February 6 2015 Retrieved February 6 2015 Ku AS Chan LT April 1999 The first case of H5N1 avian influenza infection in a human with complications of adult respiratory distress syndrome and Reye s syndrome Journal of Paediatrics and Child Health 35 2 207 9 doi 10 1046 j 1440 1754 1999 t01 1 00329 x PMID 10365363 S2CID 7985883 a b c Orlowski JP Hanhan UA Fiallos MR 2002 Is aspirin a cause of Reye s syndrome A case against Drug Safety 25 4 225 31 doi 10 2165 00002018 200225040 00001 PMID 11994026 S2CID 20552758 Orlowski JP August 1999 Whatever happened to Reye s syndrome Did it ever really exist Critical Care Medicine 27 8 1582 7 doi 10 1097 00003246 199908000 00032 PMID 10470768 Hurwitz E S 1989 Reye s syndrome Epidemiologic Reviews 11 249 253 doi 10 1093 oxfordjournals epirev a036043 PMID 2680560 Gosalakkal JA Kamoji V September 2008 Reye syndrome and reye like syndrome Pediatric Neurology 39 3 198 200 doi 10 1016 j pediatrneurol 2008 06 003 PMID 18725066 New advice on oral salicylate gels in under 16s Press release Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency April 23 2009 Archived from the original on April 26 2009 Retrieved May 1 2009 2 9 Antiplatelet drugs British National Formulary for Children British Medical Association and Royal Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain 2007 p 151 Hall SM Plaster PA Glasgow JF Hancock P 1988 Preadmission antipyretics in Reye s syndrome Arch Dis Child 63 7 857 66 doi 10 1136 adc 63 7 857 PMC 1779086 PMID 3415311 Autret Leca E Jonville Bera 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 doi 10 1016 S0895 4356 00 00366 8 PMID 11470397 Reye RD Morgan G Baral J 1963 Encephalopathy and fatty degeneration of the viscera A Disease entity in childhood Lancet 2 7311 749 52 doi 10 1016 S0140 6736 63 90554 3 PMID 14055046 Starko KM Ray CG Dominguez LB Stromberg WL Woodall DF December 1980 Reye s syndrome and salicylate use Pediatrics 66 6 859 864 doi 10 1542 peds 66 6 859 PMID 7454476 S2CID 41712701 Mortimor Edward A Jr et al June 1 1980 Reye Syndrome Ohio Michigan Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report 69 29 532 810 2 PMID 7079050 Archived from the original on June 11 2008 Aspirin Labels to Warn About Reye Syndrome The New York Times Associated Press March 8 1986 Archived from the original on March 5 2016 External links EditNINDS Reye s Syndrome Information Page Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Reye syndrome amp oldid 1140132419, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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