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Rheumatic heart disease CVS 4. Hisham Alkhalidi. Rheumatic fever. Definition Aetiology Pathological changes (Aschoff body) Cardiac and non-cardiac manifestations of rheumatic fever with special emphasis on valvular manifestations (mitral and aortic valves involvement). Rheumatic fever.
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Rheumatic heart diseaseCVS 4 HishamAlkhalidi
Rheumatic fever • Definition • Aetiology • Pathological changes (Aschoff body) • Cardiac and non-cardiac manifestations of rheumatic fever with special emphasis on valvular manifestations (mitral and aortic valves involvement)
Rheumatic fever • Acute • Immunologically mediated • Multisystem inflammatory disease • Occurs few weeks after an episode of: group A β-hemolytic streptococcal pharyngitis
Rheumatic fever • Usually affects children 5-15 years, but first attacks can occur in adults • In economically depressed urban areas or developing countries, RF and RHD remain important public health problems
Acute rheumatic mitral valvulitis superimposed on chronic rheumatic heart disease.
Chronic RHD • Mitral stenosis with diffuse fibrous thickening and distortion of the valve leaflets, commissural fusion (arrows) • Thickening and shortening of the chordaetendineae
Chronic RHD • Organization of the acute inflammation and subsequent scarring • Aschoff bodies are replaced by fibrous scar, so diagnostic forms of these lesions are rarely seen in chronic RHD • The major functional consequence of RHD is: Valvular stenosis and regurgitation
MITRAL VALVE IS THE COMMONEST VALVE AFFECTED • MAT • 70 % M • 25 % M+A
Diagnosis of acute RHD • serologic evidence of a previous streptococcal infection + two or more of the following Jones criteria: (1) carditis, (2) migratory polyarthritis of the large joints, (3) subcutaneous nodules, (4) erythemamarginatum of the skin, and (5) Sydenham chorea, a neurologic disorder with involuntary purposeless, rapid movements • One of the Jones criteria manifestations and two minor manifestations (nonspecific signs and symptoms that include fever, arthralgia, or elevated blood levels of acute-phase reactants)
Chronic rheumatic heart disease • More likely to occur when the first attack: • In early childhood • Sever • Recurrence • The long-term prognosis is highly variable • Surgical repair or replacement of diseased valves has greatly improved the outlook for patients with RHD
Chronic RHD • The signs and symptoms of valvular disease depend on which valve(s) are involved • Mitral stenosis is the most common manifestation • Cardiac murmurs • Cardiac hypertrophy and dilation • CHF • Arrhythmias (atrial fibrillation in the setting of mitral stenosis) • Thromboembolic complications • Increased risk of subsequent infective endocarditis.
Endocarditis and pericarditisCVS 5 HishamAlkhalidi
Lectures 5 • Pathology of endocarditis and pericarditis: definitions, classification and causes with emphasis on subacute bacterial endocarditis, marantic endocarditis and chronic constrictive pericarditis
Infective endocarditis (IE) • A serious infection, characterized by: • Microbial invasion of heart valves or mural endocardium • Often with destruction of the underlying cardiac tissues • Results in bulky, friable vegetations composed of necrotic debris, thrombus, and organisms
IE, Types • Acute endocarditis, usually: • Suggests a destructive infection • Involvement of a highly virulent organism (staph. Aureus) • Attacking a previously normal valve • Death within days to weeks in more than 50% of patients despite antibiotics and surgery • Subacute endocarditis: • Low virulence organisms (strept. Viridans) • Colonizing a previously abnormal heart, especially when there are deformed valves • The disease typically appears insidiously • Follows a protracted course of weeks to months • Most patients recover after appropriate antibiotic therapy
IE Clinical presentation and complications • Acute: • Fever, rigor, malaise • Large vegetation -> emboli: • Infarction • Metastatic infection • affects distant organs like spleen, brain or heart • Kidney: Ag-Ab complex -> GN-> nephrotic syndrome or Renal failure • Congestive heart failure due to valve disease • Can lead to ring abscess and perforation of the aorta and myocardium • Death up to 60%
IEClinical presentation and complications • Subacute: • Insidious • Splenomegaly • Non specific fever, weight loss • Small vegetations, so less embolic • Low mortality
IE • Diagnosis is largely made on the basis of positive blood cultures, echocardiographic findings, and other clinical and laboratory findings
IEPathogenesis • Bacteremia is a pre-requisite • Other organs infection • IV drug abuse: • Usually Staph aureus, right heart side (Tricuspid) • Dental or surgical procedure • Trivial injury, skin, gut, urinary bladder • Contributory conditions are immunosupression and neutropenia
IEFavorable conditions of infections • Congenital defects • Chronic RHD • MV Prolapse • Deg. Calcific stenosis • Bicusped aorta • Prosthetic valve (5% in 5 years) • Indwelling catheters
Diagnsosis • Blood C/S is a major step • Duke’s criteria
Nonbacterial Thrombotic EndocarditisNBTE (Marantic endocarditis) • Attributed to: • Disseminated intravascular coagulation • Hypercoagulability • Association with malignancy (specially adenocarinoma)
Nonbacterial Thrombotic EndocarditisNBTE (Marantic endocarditis) • Gross: loose adherent groups of small nodules on the lines of valve closure (similar to those of acute rheumatic fever), valve leaflets are normal • Micro: SMALL, sterile, fibrin and platelets aggregates, no inflammation or fibrosis. • Clinically asymptomatic, if large -> may embolize, may become infected • Typically mitral valve
Endocarditis associated with SLE • Unknown etiology • Both sides of the valve • Deformity to the valve by healing of fibrinoid necrosis and mucoid degeneration • Sterile
Pericarditis • Primary vs secondery • Acute vs chronic • Uremia is the most common systemic disorder associated with pericarditis
Pericarditis • Serous • Fibrinous, serofibrinous • Purulent • Hemorrhagic • Caseous
Pericarditis • Serous: • Exudate • Non bacterial causes: • Rheumatic fever • SLE • Tumor • Uremia • Primary viral
Pericarditis • Fibrinous, serofibrinous • Same causes of serous • Most commonly due to MI • Purulent • Bacteria (staph, strept, pneuomcocus) • Fungi • Parasite • Can lead to mediastionpericaridtis or congestive pericarditis
Pericarditis • Hemorrhagic: • Blood + fibrin or pus • Surgery • TB • Tumor • Caseous: • TB • Fungi • Fibrocalcific constrictive pericarditis
Healing • Resolution • Fibrosis: • Epicardial plaque • Thin • Thick massive adhesion
Adhesive mediastinopericarditis: • heart contracts against the surrounding structures • Constrictive pericarditis: • 1 cm thick dense fibrous obliteration • Limit diastolic expansion and cardiac output
Chronic Pericarditis: Morphology • Ranges from delicates adhesions to dense fibrotic scars that obliterate the pericardial space. • In extreme cases the heart can’t expand during diastole : constrictive pericarditis
Clinical picture • Atypical chest pain (worse on reclining) • High pitch friction rub. • Significant exudate cardiac tamponade faint distant heart sounds, distended neck veins, declining cardiac output and shock • Chronic constrictive pericarditis venous distension and low cardiac output.