Rheumatic-Fever
Rheumatic-Fever
Rheumatic-Fever
• Etiology
• Epidemiology
• Pathogenesis
• Pathologic lesions
• Clinical manifestations & Laboratory findings
• Diagnosis & Differential diagnosis
• Treatment & Prevention
• Prognosis
• References
Etiology
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Pathologic Lesions
1. Arthritis
• Flitting & fleeting migratory polyarthritis, involving
major joints
• Commonly involved joints-knee, ankle, elbow &
wrist
• Occur in 80%, involved joints are exquisitely
tender
• In children below 5 yrs. arthritis usually mild but
carditis more prominent
• Arthritis do not progress to chronic disease
Clinical Features
2.Carditis
• Manifest as pancarditis (endocarditis, myocarditis
and pericarditis), occur in 40-50% of cases
• Carditis is the only manifestation of rheumatic
fever that leaves a sequelae & permanent
damage to the organ
• Valvulitis occur in acute phase
• Chronic phase- fibrosis, calcification & stenosis
of heart valves (fishmouth valves)
Rheumatic
heart
disease.
Abnormal
mitral valve.
Thick, fused
chordae
Another view
of thick and
fused mitral
valves in
Rheumatic
heart disease
Clinical Features
3.Sydenham Chorea
• Occur in 5-10% of cases
• Mainly in girls of 1-15 yrs. age
• May appear even 6/12 mth. after the attack of R.F.
• Clinically manifest as-clumsiness, deterioration of
handwriting, emotional lability or grimacing of face
• Clinical signs - pronator sign, jack in the box sign,
milking sign of hands
Clinical Features
4.Erythema Marginatum
• Occur in <5%.
• Unique, transient, serpiginous-looking lesions
of 1-2 inches in size
• Pale center with red irregular margin
• More on trunks & limbs & non-itchy
• Worsens with application of heat
• Often associated with chronic carditis
Erythema Marginatum
Clinical Features
5.Subcutaneous nodules
• Occur in 10%
• Painless, pea-sized, palpable nodules
• Mainly over extensor surfaces of joints, spine,
scapulae & scalp
• Associated with strong seropositivity
• Always associated with severe carditis
Subcutaneous nodule
Clinical Features
• High ESR
• Anemia, leucocytosis
• Elevated C-reactive protien
• ASO titre >200 Todd units.
(Peak value attained at 3 weeks,then
comes down to normal by 6 weeks)
• Anti-DNAse B test
• Throat culture-GABHstreptococci
Paraclinic Findings
*The presence of two major criteria, or of one major and two minor criteria,
indicates a high probability of acute rheumatic fever, if supported by evidence of
Group A streptococcal nfection.
or
Ethylsuccinate 40 mg/kg/d 2-4 times daily Oral 10 d
(maximum 1 g/d)
• Bed rest
• Treatment of congestive cardiac failure:
-digitalis,diuretics
• Treatment of chorea:
-diazepam or haloperidol
• Rest to joints & supportive splinting
STEP IV : Secondary Prevention of Rheumatic Fever (Prevention
of Recurrent Attacks)
Agent Dose Mode