Carditis during Second Attacks of Rheumatic Fever
- 6 June 1963
- journal article
- Published by Massachusetts Medical Society in New England Journal of Medicine
- Vol. 268 (23) , 1259-1261
- https://doi.org/10.1056/nejm196306062682301
Abstract
A NUMBER of studies have reported that patients without clinical evidence of carditis in their first attack of rheumatic fever or chorea usually do not acquire carditis in subsequent attacks and often escape residual rheumatic heart disease. The reports, however, differ in the percentage of such patients with normal cardiac findings on follow-up examinations.In 1937 Roth and his co-workers1 reported data on the second attack in 149 children who had had polyarthritis without clinical signs of carditis. During their second attack 51 of these 149 children (34 per cent) had carditis. In 1938 Boone and Levine2 presented 225 cases . . .Keywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Prognostic Significance of Valvular Involvement in Acute Rheumatic FeverNew England Journal of Medicine, 1959
- The first ten years of rheumatic infection in childhoodAmerican Heart Journal, 1948
- THE PROGNOSIS IN “POTENTIAL RHEUMATIC HEART DISEASE” AND “RHEUMATIC MITRAL INSUFFICIENCY.”The Lancet Healthy Longevity, 1938
- Heart disease in children: A. Rheumatic group I. Certain aspects of the age at onset and of recurrences in 488 cases of juvenile rheumatism ushered in by major clinical manifestationsAmerican Heart Journal, 1937