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arthritis may be short lived and
carditis silent
Lyn Williamson a Department of Rheumatology,
Nuffield Orthopaedic Centre, Oxford OX3 7LD, b Department of Paediatric Cardiology, John Radcliffe
Hospital, Oxford OX3 9DU
Correspondence to: L Williamson, 17 Coxwell Road, Faringdon SN7 7EB
d.williamson{at}ukonline.co.uk
The incidence of acute rheumatic fever has increased in the
developed world.1-4 Although the criteria for diagnosis
are well known, the clinical symptoms needed to make a diagnosis do not always arise concurrently and the initial illness may be mild and short
lived. Isolated arthritis is the presenting symptom in 14-42% of
patients.3-5 There may be no history of sore throat, or
this symptom may not be mentioned by the patient,5 and the carditis may be silent.
6 7
The diagnosis will be missed
if appropriate investigations are not carried out during the acute illness. These patients are susceptible to recurrent attacks of rheumatic fever, and damage to heart valves becomes increasingly severe
with each subsequent attack.
8 9
Children are affected more than adults and may present to their general practitioners or to
accident and emergency, orthopaedic, rheumatology, or paediatric departments. To highlight potential diagnostic problems, we describe three cases of rheumatic fever in young people who presented to one
musculoskeletal centre in a six month period.
Case 1
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Case reports
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Case reports
Discussion
References
A 3 year old girl was taken to an accident and emergency
department with a painful swelling of her right knee that came on
quickly. She had had a mild cough, sore throat, and low grade
temperature for 10 days. There was no history of trauma. No fracture
was seen on a radiograph, and the girl was sent home. Two days later
the girl's right wrist swelled. She was admitted to the Nuffield
Orthopaedic Centre for assessment. When she was examined her
temperature was 37.4°C and her pulse was regular (80 beats per
minute). She had large infected tonsils, posterior cervical
lymphadenopathy, and a grade 2/6 basal ejection systolic murmur. Her
wrist and knee were warm, red, swollen, and tender, but she had no
rashes or subcutaneous nodules. By the following morning she was
afebrile and her joint swelling had resolved spontaneously. A
provisional diagnosis of viral arthritis was made and she was
discharged home. Her general practitioner prescribed a course of
amoxicillin for her cough and at follow up two weeks later she was
completely well.
Case 2
A 10 year old boy was referred with a one week history of sore
throat and headache and a one day history of irritable left hip. The
hip looked normal on radiography. An ultrasound scan showed an effusion
from which 3 ml of clear, sterile fluid was aspirated. The boy's
symptoms improved immediately after aspiration and although markers of
inflammation were raised (erythrocyte sedimentation rate, 60 mm in
first hour; C reactive protein, 77 mg/l), he was discharged home with a
probable diagnosis of viral related arthritis.
strongly supporting a recent streptococcal infection. Viral
serology and antinuclear antibody values were negative.
A diagnosis of acute rheumatic fever was made, based on the carditis,
arthritis, and the evidence of recent streptococcal infection. The rash
was erythema marginatum. The systolic murmur noted at presentation was
an innocent pulmonary flow murmur, which was not related to his
subsequent carditis. The patient's mitral valve leaflets and chordae
tendinae remain slightly thickened, but there is no mitral incompetence
and no appreciable valve gradient. He has been slowly weaned off oral
prednisolone and aspirin. We plan that he should have long term
prophylactic treatment with penicillin.
Case 3
A 17 year old trainee nursery nurse was referred to the
rheumatology service in early April with pain and swelling of her left
elbow associated with overlying erythema nodosum. She had presented
with similar symptoms in early April on the previous two years. On
those occasions she had been woodland camping with cub scouts, but gave
no history of insect bites or upper respiratory infections. Orthopaedic
surgeons, paediatricians, and haematologists (as the resolving erythema
nodosum looked like bruises) had investigated the patient. Results of
investigation of joint aspirate, magnetic resonance imaging,
inflammatory markers, and clotting screens were normal. On both
previous occasions the patient had been treated empirically with
flucloxacillin for two weeks, and her symptoms had resolved completely
after four weeks. The third episode had started on 1 April 1998, but on
this occasion she had not been camping. The patient noted a sore throat
which she believed had developed two days after the elbow pain.
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Discussion |
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It is important to make a clear diagnosis (box) of acute rheumatic fever so that valvular damage can be minimised during the initial attack and further episodes and long term sequelae prevented with prophylactic antibiotic treatment. However, it is also important not to overdiagnose the condition as this might lead to morbidity from unnecessary use of antibiotics and unwarranted anxiety in patients and their families. The future insurance and employment prospects of these patients may also be adversely affected by a diagnosis of rheumatic fever.
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Investigating acute childhood arthritis
The following investigations should be carried out:
If streptococcal infection or systemic juvenile chronic arthritis is suspected:
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Two of our cases show that the arthritis associated with acute rheumatic fever may be migratory and short lived. If appropriate tests to establish group A streptococcal infection are not taken at presentation, the opportunity may be missed. There may be no history of sore throat,6 especially in younger children, who are poor at localising sites of illness. Examination of the fauces and throat swab should therefore be routine for all children presenting with arthritis. Current tools used for diagnosing streptococcal illness are imperfect. The throat swab will be positive in only a third of patients infected with group A streptococcus before antibiotic treatment, and in only a tenth of patients afterwards.10 In addition, a positive culture may show a chronic carrier state and not recent infection. Ideally, a positive throat culture plus a sequential rise in titres shown by serological tests will confirm recent group A streptococcal infection. Since antistreptolysin O titres remain negative in 20% of patients with acute rheumatic fever, a second streptococcal serum antibody test such as the anti-DNase B titre should also be used. When the two tests are combined, the sensitivity rises to over 90%. 1 11 The anti-DNase B test detects antibodies against the deoxyribonuclease B enzyme produced by most group A streptococci.12 It is more time consuming and expensive than the antistreptolysin O test, and should be used if clinical suspicion is high, throat cultures are negative, and the antistreptolysin O test result is borderline or low.
Suspicions of diagnosis
All three patients presented with acute arthritis. In communities
where rheumatic fever is rare, the arthritis is difficult to
distinguish from that associated with a viral infection (see box). It
occurs early in the illness, at a time when anti-streptococcal antibody
titres should be rising, underlying the need to take timely laboratory
samples. The arthritis is non-erosive, rarely lasts more than four
weeks, and responds well to aspirin and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory
drugs. Patients who have isolated persistent (rather than migratory)
arthritis and group A streptococcal infection are usually classed as
having post-streptococcal reactive arthritis. The relation between
post-streptococcal reactive arthritis and acute rheumatic fever is
debated, but as these patients are prone to subsequent attacks of acute
rheumatic fever and carditis they are usually given the same advice
about antibiotic prophylaxis patients with acute rheumatic
fever.
10 13-15
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Guidelines for diagnosing the initial attack of rheumatic
fever
If supported by evidence of preceding group A streptococcal infection, two major manifestations or of one major and two minor manifestations indicate a high probability of acute rheumatic fever:1 Major manifestations
Minor manifestations Clinical findings
Laboratory findings
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Changing pattern of acute rheumatic fever
The incidence of rheumatic fever has risen, but the
experience of most doctors in this country in recognising and treating
the condition is limited. Patients and doctors are currently
discouraged from investigating and treating sore
throats.17 Debate continues on optimal primary prevention,
acute treatment, and secondary prophylaxis regimens as the risk of
recurrent acute rheumatic fever varies between
populations.
18 19 20
It is estimated that without
antibiotic prophylaxis patients with acute rheumatic fever but no
clinical evidence of carditis and those with post-streptococcal
reactive arthritis have an 8-10% risk of developing acute rheumatic
heart disease over the subsequent five years.
14 21
In
general, the risk of recurrent acute rheumatic fever increases with the
number and severity of previous attacks, continued exposure to group A
streptococcal infection, and economic disadvantage. The risk falls with
age and increasing interval since most recent attack. Until specific
risk factors (either host or bacterial characteristics) for the
development of subsequent carditis are better delineated, antibiotic
prophylaxis should be given to both groups of patients. Intramuscular
benzathine penicillin (1.2 million units every 3 or 4 weeks) or oral
penicillin (250-500 mg twice daily) is usually given until the end of
full time education or five years after the last acute attack. Some doctors argue that lifetime prophylaxis should be
given.
16 18 19
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Acknowledgments |
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We thank Anne Hall, consultant rheumatologist, Wexham Park Hospital, Slough, for helpful comments about the manuscript.
Contributors: LW was involved in the diagnosis and management of cases 1 and 3, was the main author, and is the guarantor. PB was involved in writing and revising the paper and in the diagnosis and management of case 2. AM was the consultant in charge of all three cases and was involved in manuscript revision. IOS was responsible for cardiological investigations and treatment of the three cases and for the statements on echocardiography; she is guarantor for these statements, and LW is guarantor for the rest of the article.
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Footnotes |
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Competing interests: None declared.
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References |
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(Accepted 25 May 1999)
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