1. FPIN's Clinical Inquiries. Aspirin use in children for fever or viral syndromes.
- Author
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Beutler AI, Chesnut GT, Mattingly JC, and Jamieson B
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Age Factors, Child, Child, Preschool, Humans, Infant, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Risk Factors, Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal adverse effects, Aspirin adverse effects, Fever drug therapy, Reye Syndrome chemically induced
- Abstract
Aspirin should not be used to treat acute febrile viral illness in children. (Strength of Recommendation [SOR]: C, based on case-control studies). Although no causal link has been proven, data from case-control and historic cohort studies demonstrate an association between aspirin use and Reye syndrome. The risk of Reye syndrome decreases with age, becoming extremely rare by the late teenage years. Other nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs are effective antipyretics and are not associated with the constellation of symptoms seen in Reye syndrome, which includes nausea, vomiting, headache, excitability, delirium, combativeness, and coma. Aspirin use in children younger than 19 years should be limited to diseases in which aspirin has a proven benefit, such as Kawasaki disease and the juvenile arthritides. (SOR: C, based on expert opinion).
- Published
- 2009