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Rheumatic heart Rheumatic heart disease disease By By Dr. Abdelaty Shawky Dr. Abdelaty Shawky Assistant professor of pathology Assistant professor of pathology

Rheumatic heart disease By Dr. Abdelaty Shawky Assistant professor of pathology

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Page 1: Rheumatic heart disease By Dr. Abdelaty Shawky Assistant professor of pathology

Rheumatic heart diseaseRheumatic heart disease

ByByDr. Abdelaty ShawkyDr. Abdelaty Shawky

Assistant professor of pathologyAssistant professor of pathology

Page 2: Rheumatic heart disease By Dr. Abdelaty Shawky Assistant professor of pathology

RHEUMATIC HEART DISEASERHEUMATIC HEART DISEASE

• Rheumatic fever is a post-streptococcal immune-

mediated inflammatory disease affect heart and extra-

cardiac sites e.g. joints, skin, brain….

• The incidence and mortality of rheumatic fever has

declined over the past 30 years (due to improved

socioeconomic condition and rapid diagnosis and

treatment of strep. pharyngitis).

Page 3: Rheumatic heart disease By Dr. Abdelaty Shawky Assistant professor of pathology

* Pathogenesis:

• An acute attack of streptococcal pharyngitis by group A

beta-hemolytic streptococci.

• Within 2-4 weeks after this attack anti-streptococcal

antibodies are formed and attack the heart and the

extra-cardiac sites.

• The mechanism of this immune reaction is not yet

understood, however, the most accepted hypothesis is

antigenic similarity hypothesis.

Page 4: Rheumatic heart disease By Dr. Abdelaty Shawky Assistant professor of pathology

vegetations Aschoff body pericarditis

Strep throatAntibody production

Antibody cross-reaction with heart

Page 5: Rheumatic heart disease By Dr. Abdelaty Shawky Assistant professor of pathology

* Pathological features of Rheumatic Heart disease:

• The characteristic lesion of acute rheumatic fever is the

Aschoff body, consisting of a focus of necrosis

(representing the site of antigen – antibody reaction)

surrounded by activated histiocytes and lymphocytes.

The histiocytes may be mononuclear or multinuclear,

and are referred to as Anitschkow's or Aschoff cells.

Page 6: Rheumatic heart disease By Dr. Abdelaty Shawky Assistant professor of pathology

• These foci may be found in the pericardium, the

myocardium, or uncommonly in the valves.

• They ultimately "heal" by fibrosis.

Page 7: Rheumatic heart disease By Dr. Abdelaty Shawky Assistant professor of pathology

- The disease passes into two phases;

A. Acute phase: acute rheumatic pancarditis (inflammation of endocardium, myocardium and pericardium) 1.Myocarditis.2.Pericarditis: "bread and butter", due to fibrinous inflammation 3.Endocarditis: edema, inflammation and fibrin deposits on valve leaflets (vegetations) along lines of closure. Mitral valve is commonly affected followed by the aortic valve. Aschoff nodules are uncommon in the valves.

Page 8: Rheumatic heart disease By Dr. Abdelaty Shawky Assistant professor of pathology

B. Chronic phase:

Acute changes may resolve completely or progress to

scarring and development of chronic valvular deformities

many years after the acute disease.

Page 9: Rheumatic heart disease By Dr. Abdelaty Shawky Assistant professor of pathology

Aschoff’s body

Page 10: Rheumatic heart disease By Dr. Abdelaty Shawky Assistant professor of pathology
Page 11: Rheumatic heart disease By Dr. Abdelaty Shawky Assistant professor of pathology

Rheumatic vegetationsRheumatic vegetations

Page 12: Rheumatic heart disease By Dr. Abdelaty Shawky Assistant professor of pathology

Aortic valve stenosis

Page 13: Rheumatic heart disease By Dr. Abdelaty Shawky Assistant professor of pathology

* Extra-cardiac lesions of rheumatic fever:

• These lesions are acute and resolve completely without

disability.

1. Migratory polyarthritis: It causes "fleeting arthritis" in

the large joints, self limited, no chronic deformities.

2. Skin: skin rheumatic nodules, erythema marginatum.

3. Sydenham chorea: a neurologic disorder with

involuntary purposeless, rapid movements.

Page 14: Rheumatic heart disease By Dr. Abdelaty Shawky Assistant professor of pathology

Erythema marginatum

Page 15: Rheumatic heart disease By Dr. Abdelaty Shawky Assistant professor of pathology

* Clinical features of Acute Rheumatic Fever:

• Occurs 10 days to 6 weeks after pharyngitis

• Peak incidence: 5-15 years.

• Cardiac manifestations: pericardial friction rubs, weak heart

sounds, tachycardia and arrhythmias.

• Extra-cardiac: fever, migratory polyarthritis of large joints,

arthralgia, skin lesions, chorea.

• Pharyngeal culture may be negative, but anti streptolysin O

(ASO) titer will be high.

Page 16: Rheumatic heart disease By Dr. Abdelaty Shawky Assistant professor of pathology

* Jones criteria: * Jones criteria: A. Major criteria:A. Major criteria:– Carditis. – Polyarthritis – Sydenham’s chorea.– Erythema marginatum. – Subcutaneous nodules.

B. Minor criteria:B. Minor criteria:– Previous history of rheumatic fever. – Arthralgia. – Fever.– Lab tests indicative of inflammation : ESR (erythrocyte sedimentation

rate), CRP (C-Reactive protein), leukocytosis. – ECG changes.

Page 17: Rheumatic heart disease By Dr. Abdelaty Shawky Assistant professor of pathology

* Diagnosis of rheumatic fever:

• Need 2 major criteria or 1 major and 2 minor criteria.

Page 18: Rheumatic heart disease By Dr. Abdelaty Shawky Assistant professor of pathology

CHRONIC RHEUMATIC HEART DISEASECHRONIC RHEUMATIC HEART DISEASE

- Endocarditis heals by progressive fibrosis. Chronic

scarring of the valves constitutes the most important

long-term sequelae of rheumatic fever, and usually

becomes clinically manifest decades after the acute

process.

• Left sided valves (mitral then aortic) are more

commonly involved than the right valves.

• Fibrosis of valve leaflets --> stenosis.

Page 19: Rheumatic heart disease By Dr. Abdelaty Shawky Assistant professor of pathology

• Fibrosis of chordae tendonae --> regurgitation

(improper closure).

• Other cardiac complications:

1. Subacute bacterial endocarditis.

2. Arrhythmia.

3. Chronic heart failure.

Page 20: Rheumatic heart disease By Dr. Abdelaty Shawky Assistant professor of pathology

• In valve stenosis:

Leaflets are thickened, fibrotic, shrunken with fusion.

Dilatation and hypertrophy of left atrium.

Secondary deposition of Ca++

fish mouth (button hole) stenosis - i.e. the stenosed

valve looks like a fish's mouth

Lungs are firm and heavy (chronic passive

congestion).

Page 21: Rheumatic heart disease By Dr. Abdelaty Shawky Assistant professor of pathology

Pulmonary hypertension

Right side of the heart may be affected later (right

ventricular hypertrophy).

• In valve incompetence (regurgitation):

– Retracted leaflets.

– Left ventricular hypertrophy and dilatation.

Page 22: Rheumatic heart disease By Dr. Abdelaty Shawky Assistant professor of pathology

Mitral stenosis with commissural fusion

Page 23: Rheumatic heart disease By Dr. Abdelaty Shawky Assistant professor of pathology