Rheumatic heart disease
From IDWiki
Background
- Delayed autoimmune reaction to group A streptococcal pharyngitis
Pathophysiology
- Cross-reactivity of anti-streptococcal antibodies with interstitial cardiac valvular cells
Epidemiology
- Occurs in about 3% of cases of untreated streptococcal pharyngitis
Clinical Manifestations
- Almost always affects the mitral valve with isolate mitral stenosis being the most common
- Mitral regurgitation, aortic stenosis, and aortic regurgitation also possible
- Acute rheumatic fever can cause inflammation of essentially any part of the heart
Investigations
- Anti-streptolysin-O titre (ASOT)
- >116 is suggestive of recent group A streptococcal infection
Complications
- Carditis leading to rheumatic heart disease in 30-45% of cases
Management
- Acute
- Antibiotics
- First-line: penicillin V for 10 days
- Alternative: amoxicillin for 10 days
- If carditis, add antiinflammatory
- First-line: high-dose ASA 20mg/kg?? (~1.3g) po qid
- Alternative: prednisone 1g/kg po daily with a 9-week taper
- Antibiotics
- Prophylaxis, including patients with mild latent disease on echo
- Benzathine penicillin G 1.2mU IM q3-4week