Rheumatic Fever
Etiology, Pathogenesis, Epidemiology,
Clinical Features, Complications, Management
Prognosis, Prevention
Prof. Imran Iqbal
Fellowship in Pediatric Neurology (Australia)
Prof of Paediatrics(2003-2018)
Prof of Pediatrics Emeritus, CHICH
Prof of Pediatrics, CIMS
Multan, Pakistan
Al Quran surah Al Shuaraa26:88-89
On the day of judgement, wealth or family will not be of any benefit;
only the person who comes with a pure heart will be successful
Rheumatic Fever
Rheumatic Fever –Etiology
•Rheumatic Fever is a post-streptococcal infection
•It is seen within weeks after an episode of
Streptococcal Tonsillitis
•Repeated episodes of Rheumatic Fever are seen
after recurrent streptococcal infections
•There is inflammation of collagen tissues more
prominent in joints, heart and skin
•Permanent damage to heart valves can produce
Rheumatic Heart Disease
Rheumatic Fever -Pathogenesis
•Pathological lesions in Rheumatic Fever are produced by
Immune –mediated mechanisms
•Immune-mediated Cross-reactivity –antibodies produced
against Streptococcal antigens damage specific tissues in the
body because of antigenic similarity
•Immune-mediated Antigen binding –attachment of
streptococcal antigens to collagen tissues can produce an
immune response against these antigens in specific tissues
Epidemiology
•Incidence–50 cases / 100,000 children / year
•Rheumatic Heart Disease is 50 % of all cardiac
diseases in children
•Rheumatic Heart Disease is a significant contributor
to child mortality in children
•Rheumatic Heart Disease is a leading cause of heart
disease among adults up to 40 years of age
Rheumatic Fever
Clinical Features
Case scenario
•A ten year old boy presents with low grade fever and joint
pains for the last 10 days. There is history of pain in elbows,
and pain and swelling in left ankle and left knee
•On examination, heart rate is 120/min, respiration is 20/min
and temperature is 99.5 F
•Child is not able to walk and his right ankle is swollen and
tender
•Cardiac examination reveals apex beat in 6
th
intercostal
space lateral to mid-clavicular line. Pan-systolic murmur is
heard at the apex which radiates to axilla
•Liver is palpable by 2 cm below the right costal margin
•What is your diagnosis ?
Case scenario
•A ten year old boy presents with low grade fever and joint pains for the last 10 days. There
is history of pain in elbows, and pain and swelling in left ankle and left knee
•On examination, heart rate is 120/min, respiration is 20/min and temperature is 99.5 F
•Child is not able to walk and his right ankle is swollen and tender
•Cardiac examination reveals apex beat in 6
th
intercostal space lateral to mid-clavicular line.
Pan-systolic murmur is heard at the apex which radiates to axilla
•Liver is palpable by 2 cm below the right costal margin
•What is your diagnosis ?
•Rheumatic Fever
•Mitral Regurgitation
Clinical Features
•Poly-arthiritis-(50%)
•Carditis (clinical or subclinical)-(50 –75 %)
•Subcutaneous nodules (1 %)
•Erythema marginatum(1 %)
•Chorea (10 %)
Poly-arthiritis
•Seen in 50 % of cases
•Involves large joints
•Migratory in nature
•Pain and/or swelling of joints
•No residual damage
Rheumatic Carditis
(clinical / on echocardiography)
•Seen in 50 –60 % of cases
•Pan-carditis–endocarditis, myocarditis, pericarditis
•Mitral and Aortic valves are affected
•Mitral regurgitation murmur indicates clinical Carditis
•Subclinical Carditis is detected on echocardiography
•Carditis may result in congestive cardiac failure
•Pericarditis causes pericardial friction rub
•Rheumatic Carditis can result in permanent valve damage,
more commonly after repeated infections
Subcutaneous Nodules
•Rarely seen
•Firm nodules on bony prominences
•Associated with severe carditis
Erythema Marginatum
•Rarely seen
•Serpiginous lesions
•Red margins with pale center
•Associated with severe carditis
Chorea
•Seen in 10 % of cases
•Emotional lability
•Late manifestation
•Occurs alone commonly
•Involuntary movements of peripheral limbs
•Semi-purposeful spontaneous movements
Investigations
•Inflammation –
•ESR -increased
•CBC -neutrophilia
•CRP -increased
•Carditis (clinical / on echocardiography) –
•ECG –prolonged P-R interval
•Echocardiography detects subclinical carditis
•Streptococcal infection (past or present) –
•Throat culture for beta-hemolytic Streptococci
•ASO (anti-streptolysinO) titre
Rheumatic Fever
Diagnosis
Revised Jones criteria –2015 (Jones criteria -1944)
2 major / 1 major and 2 minor + essential criteria
Major Criteria
•Poly-arthiritis
•Carditis ( clinical carditis / subclinical
carditis on echocardiography )
•Subcutaneous nodules
•Erythema marginatum
•Chorea
Minor Criteria
•Clinical
•Arthralgia
•Fever > 100.4F
•Laboratory
•Inflammatory markers
( ESR > 30 or CRP > 3.0 )
•Prolonged P-R interval
Essential Criteria
Positive Throat culture for beta-hemolytic Streptococci
OR
ASO (anti-streptolysinO) titre
Prognosis
•Severity of Carditis
•Recurrences of streptococcal infection
•Adequate management of Rheumatic Fever
•Chemoprophylaxis for prevention
Prevention
Primary Prevention of Rheumatic Fever
•Prevent the first episode of Rheumatic Fever
•Treat acute tonsillitis promptly
•Give effective antibiotics (Amoxicillin) for 10 days to
eradicate Streptococcal throat infection
Secondary Prevention of Rheumatic Fever
•Prevent the recurrence of Rheumatic Fever
•Prevent further episodes of Streptococcal throat
infection (Acute Tonsillitis)
•Give Chemoprophylaxis –regular long-term
antibiotics for prevention of Streptococcal throat
infection (till 21 years of age)
•BenzathinePenicillin (IM) (long-acting) every 3-4
weeks
OR
•Amoxicillin (Oral) twice daily
Secondary Prevention of Rheumatic Fever
Duration of Chemoprophylaxis
•Rheumatic Fever –till 21 years of age
•Rheumatic Heart Disease –till 40 years of age
Rheumatic Heart Disease
Rheumatic Heart Disease –Etiology
•Rheumatic Heart Disease results from repeated
episodes of Rheumatic Fever associated with
Carditis which damage the heart valves
•Repeated episodes of Rheumatic Fever are seen
after recurrent streptococcal throat infections
•Damage to heart valves can produce Rheumatic
Heart Disease
Mitral Regurgitation
•Mitral regurgitation is the commonest valve lesion
in Rheumatic Heart Disease
•It may be asymptomatic or present with Congestive
Heart Failure
Mitral Regurgitation –clinical examination
•Cardiac examination reveals soft Pan-systolic
murmur at apex radiating to axilla
Mitral Regurgitation -management
•Echocardiography confirms the diagnosis
•Medical management
•Rheumatic Fever prophylaxis
•management of CHF
•Surgical management
•Mitral valve replacement with a prosthetic heart
valve
Mitral Stenosis
Mitral Stenosis
•Mitral stenosis can develop in damaged mitral valve after
years
•It may be associated with Mitral Regurgitation (MR+MS)
•It is seen in adolescents and adults
•It may present with dyspnea at exertion or orthopnea
(inability lie supine due to pulmonary edema)
Mitral Stenosis –clinical features
•Cardiac examination reveals loud S1 and rumbling
mid-diasystolicmurmur at apex
Mitral Stenosis -management
•Echocardiography confirms the diagnosis
•Medical management
•Rheumatic Fever prophylaxis
•management of CHF
•Surgical management
•Mitral valve dilatation with a balloon catheter
•Mitral valve open repair
•Mitral valvereplacement with a prosthetic heart valve
Aortic Regurgitation
Aortic Regurgitation
•Aortic Regurgitation is usually associated with mitral valve
disease
•It may be asymptomatic or present with Congestive Heart
Failure
Aortic Regurgitation –clinical examination
•Cardiac examination reveals soft diastolic murmur
at LUSB 3
rd
intercostal space
Aortic Regurgitation –management
•Echocardiography confirms the diagnosis
•Medical management
•Rheumatic Fever prophylaxis
•management of CHF
•Surgical management
•Aortic valve replacement with a prosthetic heart
valve
Aortic Stenosis
Aortic Stenosis
•Aortic Stenosis may be associated with Aortic Regurgitation
(AR+AS)
•It may present with palpitation and dyspnea at exertion
Aortic Stenosis –clinical features
•Cardiac examination reveals harsh systolic murmur
at aortic area (2
nd
intercostal space at right of
sternum)
Aortic Stenosis -management
•Echocardiography confirms the diagnosis
•Medical management
•Rheumatic Fever prophylaxis
•management of CHF
•Surgical management
•Aortic valve dilatation with a balloon catheter
•Aortic valve open repair
•Aortic valve replacement with an artificial heart valve