Rheumatic Heart Disease
Rheumatic Heart Disease
Rheumatic Heart Disease
Heart Disease
OBJECTIVES
Define rheumatic fever and rheumatic heart disease.
• Familial predisposition
• Over crowding
Pronator sign: Inability to hold the hand above the head with
palms facing each other it results in pronation of forearm and
palm face outwards
Wormian darting movements of the tongue upon protrusion (Jack
in the Box)
Hung up Reflux: On eliciting Knee jerk: knee extends and the leg
and foot hangs up in the mid air due to chorea.
MINOR CRITERIAS
• FEVER
Aschoff cells
Some Important Terminology
A new episode of rheumatic fever following
01 Recurrence another GABHS infection, occurring after
8 weeks following stopping treatment
ARF drugs
Worsening of rheumatic fever while
03 Relapse
Course under treatment and often with
carditis
04
Subclinical When clinical exam is normal but
echocardiogram is abnormal.
carditis (30%)
Moderate
Rheumatic heart disease is diagnosed in
/ High risk > 1/1000 patients at any age during one year
population
(Essential Criteria)
Exceptions to Jones
criteria
1) Chorea
Polyarthritis
Chorea
Erythema marginatum
Subcutaneous nodules
2. Eradication of Streptococci
4. Treatment of CCF
5. Treatment of Chorea
6. Prevention of Recurrences
Steroids:
• Predinisalone: 2-2.5 mg/kg/d in 4 divided doses for 2 weeks (till
ESR normalizes) and by half the dose for 2-3 wk and then tapering
of the dose by 5 mg/24 hr every 2-3 days.
• When prednisone is being tapered, aspirin should be started at 50 • Decongestive measures
-75mg/kg/day in 4 divided doses for 6 wk to prevent rebound of • Diuretics, digitalis
inflammation.- (complete total 12 weeks)
• Methyl prednisolone IV: If no response to oral steroid therapy.
• Bed rest
30 • Low sodium diet
mg/kg/d for 3 days
Treatment - Chorea
Recommendations ofofAmerican
Recommendations Heart
Am erican Heart Association
Association
PROGNOSIS
• Rheumatic fever can recur whenever the individual
experience new GABH streptococcal infection, If not on
prophylactic medicines.
Rheumatic fever
All layers of the heart and the mitral valve become inflammed
Vegetation forms
Valvular Regurgitation
and stenosis
Heart Failure
THE DIFFERENCE
Cardiomegaly myocardium
involvement
Pericardial
friction rub Pericarditis
• Commissural fusion
• Orifice is narrowed
VALVE INVOLVEMENT IN RHD
• MITRAL Valve is affected in 60 – 70% of cases
🞄 Mitral regurgitation most commonly found in
children and adolescent.
🞄 Mitral stenosis represent longer term chronic
disease, commonly in adults.
🞄 Most common complication in mitral stenosis is
atrial fibrillation.
MITRAL
STENOSIS
VALVE INVOLVEMENT IN RHD
• AORTIC Valve next most commonly affected
🞄 Generally associated with diseases of the mitral
valve.
🞄 Aortic stenosis is one of the most common and
most serious valve disease problems in elderly
population.
• Infective endocarditis
• Embolic episodes
• cardiomegaly
TREATMENT for VALVULAR
HEART DISEASE
SECONDARY-
Secondary prevention
is directed at
PRIMARY-10 days preventing acute
course of penicillin GABHS pharyngitis in
therapy; patients at substantial
risk of recurrent
acute rheumatic fever
KEY MESSAGE