The most well known Coxsackie A disease is Hand-Foot-and-Mouth Disease (unrelated to Foot-and-Mouth Disease), a common childhood illness, often produced by Coxsackie A16. In most cases infection is asymptomatic or causes only mild symptoms. In others, infection produces short-lived (7-10 days) fever and painful blisters in the mouth, on the palms and fingers of the hand, or on the soles of the feet.
Other diseases include acute haemorrhagic conjunctivitis (A24 specifically), herpangina, and aseptic meningitis (both Coxsackie A and B viruses).
Coxsackie B viruses also cause infectious myocarditis, infectious pericarditis, and pleurodynia.
The virus was first documented in 1948, during an investigation into polio, and was named after the settlement in which it was found, Coxsackie, New York
see also Bornholm disease