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Friday, January 2, 2009

JETT TRAVOLTA DIES AS A RESULT OF KAWASAKI DISEASE SEIZURE

Actress Kelly Preston has said JETT TRAVOLTA, her 16-year old son with husband John Travolta, became very sick when he was 2 and was diagnosed with Kawasaki disease, an illness that affects the blood vessels in young children.

JETT TRAVOLTA died Friday after suffering a seizure at the family's vacation home in the Bahamas, though it wasn't immediately clear whether the death was related to his illness. The boy was found in a bathtub, where he reportedly fell and hit his head.





In a 2003 interview on the Montel Williams show, Preston talked about JETT TRAVOLTA's struggle with Kawasaki disease. "It causes swelling in the organs, so your heart can swell, different important organs can swell," she said. "We thought at one point we were going to lose him."

Dr. Scott Alenick, a pediatric cardiologist in New Jersey, told FOXNews.com in an interview last year that Kawasaki disease is a condition that affects children, especially boys under the age of 5, and causes aneurysms and blockages in the blood vessels.

"We usually see it in the winter, but it can occur year-round,” Alenick, who has treated hundreds of cases of Kawasaki disease, said. “It is very unusual to die from Kawasaki disease.”

According to the American Heart Association, more than 4,000 cases of the Kawasaki disease are diagnosed annually in the United States. It occurs more often in boys of Japanese and Korean descent, but has been identified in children of all ethnicities and races, Alenick said.

While the condition is not preventable, it is treatable with most children recovering from the disease. In fact, less than 1 percent of Kawasaki Disease cases are fatal.




The danger of Kawasaki syndrome is that it can cause large aneurysms in the blood vessels that feed blood to the heart, said Alenick.

Kawasaki doesn’t come in degrees of severity, but it varies in that it may cause no aneurysms, small aneurysms, moderate aneurysms or giant aneurysms,” he said. “Giant aneurysms are more common in babies. But it’s the aneurysms that form in the vessels and the arteries that feed the heart that have the potential to cause a fatal heart attack.”

Kawasaki disease was first identified in Japan in 1967 by Dr. Tomisaku Kawasaki, and the cause of the illness is still unknown, Alenick said. There also is no blood test to identify the illness. Instead, patients are given a clinical diagnosis based on whether they display at least five of these six symptoms: a high fever that lasts for more than five days, red lips and tongue, swelling of the hands and feet, bloodshot eyes, rash and swollen glands.

Once a diagnosis is made, patients are given high doses of aspirin to control the inflammation and put on an IV drip consisting of gamma globulin. Once the initial inflammation is brought under control, most children are kept on a low dose of aspirin to prevent clots and aneurysms from forming in the veins, Alenick said.





JETT TRAVOLTA was pronounced dead at Rand Memorial Hospital, police said, and an autopsy is being scheduled.

JETT TRAVOLTA died yesterday after becoming ill and hitting his head at his family's vacation home in the Bahamas, the Associated Press reports.

A house caretaker found JETT TRAVOLTA, 16, unconscious in a bathroom late yesterday morning. He was taken by ambulance to a Freeport hospital, where he was pronounced dead, according to a statement from the police chief. The family had arrived in the Bahamas on Tuesday and had been vacationing at their home in the Old Bahama Bay resort community.

JETT TRAVOLTA had last been seen going into the bathroom on Thursday and had a history of seizures, according to the statement. A police spokeswoman said Jett apparently hit his head on the bathtub. Police said they are planning an autopsy to determine the cause of JETT TRAVOLTA's death.

John Travolta and Kelly Preston also have an 8-year-old daughter, Ella.

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