Title: Cardiology III
1- Cardiology III
- Content
- Rheumatic fever (Etiology, diagnostic
criteria, investigations and treatment)
Rheumatic carditis, Infective endocarditis
prophylaxis - Etiology
- In susceptible individuals, there is an abnormal
immune response to a preceding infection with
group A ß-haemolytic streptococcus. The disease
mainly affects children aged 5-15 years. - CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS
- Acute rheumatic fever is diagnosed using the
revised Jones criteria, which consist of clinical
and laboratory findings. - The presence of either two major criteria or one
major and two minor criteria, along with evidence
of an antecedent streptococcal infection, confirm
a diagnosis of acute rheumatic fever. - Streptococcal antibody tests, such as the
antistreptolysin O titer, are the most reliable
laboratory evidence of prior infection. - Arthritisis the most common major manifestation.
- (Arthralgia cannot be used as a minor
manifestation if arthritis is used as a major
manifestation). - Carditis occurs in about 50 of patients.
- Chorea (Sydenham chorea) consists of neurologic
and psychiatric signs. It also is uncommon and
often presents long after the infection - Erythema marginatum, a serpiginous, nonpruritic,
and evanescent rash, is uncommon, occurs on the
trunk, and is brought out by warmth. - Subcutaneous nodules are seen predominantly with
chronic or recurrent disease. They are firm,
painless, nonpruritic, mobile nodules found on
the extensor surfaces of the large and small
joints, the scalp, and the spine.
TREATMENT AND PREVENTION Benzathine penicillin
to eradicate the betahemolytic streptococcus Salic
ylates (NSAD therapy) bed rest. Additional
supportive therapy for CHF or chorea. Long-term
penicillin prophylaxis, preferably with IM
benzathine penicillin G, 1.2 million U every 28
days, is required. Prognosis of acute rheumatic
fever depends on
the degree of permanent cardiac damage. The
severity of cardiac involvement worsens with each
recurrence of rheumatic fever.
2Chronic rheumatic heart disease
Most common is mitral stenosis. Although mitral
valve is the most frequently affected, aortic,
tricuspid and, rarely, pulmonary valve disease
may occur.
Clinical signs Fever Anaemia and pallor Splinter haemorrhages in nailbed Clubbing (late) Necrotic skin lesions Changing cardiac signs Splenomegaly Neurological signs from cerebral infarction Retinal infarcts Arthritis/arthralgia Haematuria (microscopic).
Infective endocarditis It should be suspected in
any child or adult with a sustained fever,
malaise, raised ESR, unexplained anaemia or
haematuria
Diagnosis Multiple blood cultures
Echocardiography Acute-phase reactants are
raised
Prophylaxis Antibiotic prophylaxis against
bacterial endocarditis must be given to all
children with congenital heart disease (except
secundum ASD) before dental extraction or any
potentially septic operation.