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Arrhythmia Overview
Arrhythmia Overview

... exercising on a treadmill. How is it treated? If you have no symptoms, or your symptoms are fairly minor, you may not need treatment. Fast or irregular heartbeats can often be treated with medicine. If another health problem, such as a leaky heart valve or heart failure, is causing the arrhythmia, t ...
Heart Diseases and Disorders
Heart Diseases and Disorders

... Atrial Fibrillation (AF or AFib) More than 2 million people in the United States have atrial fibrillation. In AFib, the heartbeat is irregular and rapid due to disorganized signals from the heart’s electrical system. The upper chamber of the heart may beat as often as 300 times a minute, about four t ...
Infective endocarditis - ESC 2009 guidelines overview
Infective endocarditis - ESC 2009 guidelines overview

... • First and most important – proper oral hygiene • Regular dental review • Antibiotics only in high-risk group patients – Prosthetic valve or foreign material used for heart repair – History of IE – Congenital heart disease • Cyanotic without correction or with residual lickeage • CHD without lickea ...
Lab
Lab

...  BEFORE cutting into this heart, label the exterior heart (#1 analysis).  Beginning at the pulmonary artery, cut through the right ventricle.  Identify the following components of the heart: o Pulmonary Semilunar Valve (valve at the exit of the pulmonary artery from the right ventricle) o Tricusp ...
Heart Failure
Heart Failure

... myocardium, vasculature, kidney, and brain also may occur along ACE-independent pathways, through the activation of chymase  This latter pathway may be of major importance in ...
Core Clinical Problem 52: Murmur Summary ΔΔ (Index Conditions
Core Clinical Problem 52: Murmur Summary ΔΔ (Index Conditions

... Prophylactic antiobiotics against infective endocarditis are not recommended, unless the patient is undergoing a GI or GU procedure at a site of suspected infection. ...
3-Epidemiology of typhoid
3-Epidemiology of typhoid

... during summer. This period coincides with July - September rainy season and a substantial increase in fly population. • Social factors : pollution of drinking water supplies, open air defecation, and urination, low standards of food and personal hygiene, and health ignorance. ...
(From the Laboratory of Surgical Research of ttarvard Medical
(From the Laboratory of Surgical Research of ttarvard Medical

... consisting of suturing a piece of vein over the region of the pulmonic orifice, then dividing the ring with fine scissors slipped beneath this covering, thus allowing the support of the valve cusps to bulge outwards and produce an insufficiency. Recently Allen and Graham (5) have used an endoscope c ...
PowerPoint Presentation - I. Introduction to class
PowerPoint Presentation - I. Introduction to class

... ACTIVITY OF OTHER CELLS OF THE IMMUNE SYSTEM. • DEFENSE AGAINST: • BACTERIA AND VIRUSES THAT ARE INSIDE HOST CELLS AND ARE INACCESSIBLE TO ANTIBODIES. • FUNGI, PROTOZOA, AND WORMS ...
Corlentor : EPAR - Summary for the public
Corlentor : EPAR - Summary for the public

... What is Corlentor used for? Corlentor is used to treat the symptoms of long-term stable angina (pains to the chest, jaw and back, brought on by physical effort) in adults with coronary artery disease (disease of the heart caused by the obstruction of the blood vessels that supply blood to the heart ...
The Heart
The Heart

... • Tachycardia: Heart rate in excess of 100bpm • Bradycardia: Heart rate less than 60 bpm • Sinus arrhythmia: Heart rate varies 5% during respiratory cycle and up to 30% during deep respiration • Premature atrial contractions: Occasional shortened intervals between one contraction and succeeding, fre ...
Autoimmune disease I
Autoimmune disease I

... b) Non-HLA genes (cont.) Recent examples: 1- Polymorphisms in a gene called PTPN-22 (most frequently implicated with AD, a\w RA & type 1 DM. Mechanism : defect in encoded phosphatase > defect in control of tyrosine kinases activity>defect of lymphocyte responses>> excessive activation 2- Polymorphis ...
Presentation
Presentation

... – Post-streptococcal glomerulonephritis: immune complexes of Strep antigen + anti-Strep antibodies; formed in circulation or GBM – Not known why immune complex diseases develop in rare individuals after common infections ...
Dr. Frankenstein`s Ghost Heart
Dr. Frankenstein`s Ghost Heart

... occasional risks such as hepatitis B transmissions, arrhythmias, hematoma, and cardiac perforation. The patients must also take immunosuppressant’s to prevent rejection. The side affects of these medications include hypertension, renal effects, tremor, headaches, glucose intolerance, and metabolic p ...
Autoimmune Endocrinopathies
Autoimmune Endocrinopathies

... mainly in the thymus (medullary epithelial cells) that controls the presentation of self antigens to the developing T lymphocytes •  When the gene is mutated, tolerance to multiple self antigens is lost ...
ESC Guidelines on acute and chronic heart failure
ESC Guidelines on acute and chronic heart failure

... said: "There are no evidence based treatments for Around 1-2% of adults in developed countries have patients with LVEF 40% or above. Many patients heart failure. At 55 years of age, the lifetime risk is fall into the mid-range category and this should stimulate research into novel therapies." 33% fo ...
Heart Failure Case Law
Heart Failure Case Law

... 3. Assign a classification of unclassifiable (HDX6=E) if you can’t decide between chronic Heart Failure (HDX6=C) and HF unlikely (HDX6=D). Do not use “unclassifiable” if you are uncertain between “definite decompensated HF” and “possible decompensated HF”; in such a case, record “possible decompensa ...
PHYSICAL EXAMINATION OF THE HEART
PHYSICAL EXAMINATION OF THE HEART

... • Sitting bolt upright, your dyspneic (short of breath) patient has visible jugular venous pulsations to the angle of his jaw, which is 12 cm above his sternal angle. What is his right atrial pressure? Why might he be short of breath? ...
PowerPoint to accompany - Current University of Rio Grande
PowerPoint to accompany - Current University of Rio Grande

... • resistance to particular pathogens or to their toxins or metabolic by-products • based on the ability to distinguish “self” from “non-self” ...
DR. EUGENE BRAUNWALD RECEIVES HEART FAILURE
DR. EUGENE BRAUNWALD RECEIVES HEART FAILURE

... leadership or inspiration to others resulting in an important impact on the field.   ...
Chapter 16
Chapter 16

... • resistance to particular pathogens or to their toxins or metabolic by-products • based on the ability to distinguish “self” from “non-self” ...
34. Anatomy of heart
34. Anatomy of heart

... – A superficial fibrous pericardium – A deep two-layer serous pericardium • The parietal layer lines the internal surface of the fibrous pericardium • The visceral layer or epicardium lines the surface of the heart • They are separated by the fluid-filled pericardial cavity ...
Aortic Stenosis Fact Sheets
Aortic Stenosis Fact Sheets

... one gets older. It most typically occurs in patients older than 75 years of age. In a minority of cases, a congenital heart defect, rheumatic fever, radiation therapy, medication or inflammation of the membrane of the heart can also cause the valve to narrow. ...
CARDIAC MURMURS: DO YOU HEAR WHAT I HEAR?
CARDIAC MURMURS: DO YOU HEAR WHAT I HEAR?

... hypoproteinemia, fever, hyperthyroidism, pregnancy and the athletic heart. Innocent murmurs are typically soft systolic murmurs occurring in young animals. They may be directed over any valve but more often over the mitral and aortic areas. They have no known cause and are related to no cardiac dise ...
Oxidative stress, the metabolic syndrome and autoimmune disease
Oxidative stress, the metabolic syndrome and autoimmune disease

... Type 1 diabetes, which was previously called insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) or juvenile-onset diabetes, may account for 5% to 10% of all diagnosed cases of diabetes. Type 2 diabetes, which was previously called non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) or adult-onset diabetes, may ...
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Rheumatic fever



Rheumatic fever, also known as acute rheumatic fever (ARF), is an inflammatory disease that can involve the heart, joints, skin, and brain. The disease typically develops two to four weeks after a throat infection. Signs and symptoms include fever, multiple painful joints, involuntary muscle movements, and a characteristic but uncommon non itchy rash known as erythema marginatum. The heart is involved in about half of cases. Permanent damage to the heart valves, known as rheumatic heart disease (RHD), usually only occurs after multiple attacks but may occasionally occur after a single case of ARF. The damaged valves may result in heart failure. The abnormal valves also increase the risk of the person developing atrial fibrillation and infection of the valves.Acute rheumatic fever may occur following an infection of the throat by the bacteria Streptococcus pyogenes. If it is untreated ARF occurs in up to three percent of people. The underlying mechanism is believed to involve the production of antibodies against a person's own tissues. Some people due to their genetics are more likely to get the disease when exposed to the bacteria than others. Other risk factors include malnutrition and poverty. Diagnosis of ARF is often based on the presence of signs and symptoms in combination with evidence of a recent streptococcal infection.Treating people who have strep throat with antibiotics, such as penicillin, decreases their risk of getting ARF. This often involves testing people with sore throats for the infection, which may not be available in the developing world. Other preventative measures include improved sanitation. In those with ARF and RHD prolonged periods of antibiotics are sometimes recommended. Gradual return to normal activities may occur following an attack. Once RHD develops, treatment is more difficult. Occasionally valve replacement surgery or repair is required. Otherwise complications are treated as per normal.Acute rheumatic fever occurs in about 325,000 children each year and about 18 million people currently have rheumatic heart disease. Those who get ARF are most often between the ages of 5 and 14, with 20% of first-time attacks occurring in adults. The disease is most common in the developing world and among indigenous peoples in the developed world. In 2013 it resulted in 275,000 deaths down from 374,000 deaths in 1990. Most deaths occur in the developing world where as many as 12.5% of people affected may die each year. Descriptions of the condition are believed to date back to at least the 5th century BCE in the writings of Hippocrates. The disease is so named because its symptoms are similar to those of some rheumatic disorders.
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