Difference between revisions of "IPLab:Lab 9:ARF"

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File:IPLab9ARF6.jpg|This high-power photomicrograph of myocardium shows the cellular detail of another Aschoff body. In this case there appears to be a multinucleated Aschoff giant cell (arrow).  
 
File:IPLab9ARF6.jpg|This high-power photomicrograph of myocardium shows the cellular detail of another Aschoff body. In this case there appears to be a multinucleated Aschoff giant cell (arrow).  
 
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== Study Questions ==
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* <spoiler text="What is the etiology of rheumatic myocarditis?">Rheumatic fever is an acute, often recurrent, inflammatory disease that principally affects children following a pharyngeal (but not skin) infection with group A beta-hemolytic streptococci. Evidence strongly suggests that rheumatic fever is the result of an immune response to streptococcal antigens inciting either a cross-reaction to tissue antigens or a streptococcal-induced autoimmune reaction to normal tissue antigens.</spoiler>
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* <spoiler text="Would it be possible to culture the causative agent from these lesions on the heart valves?">No. Rheumatic fever is an immune-mediated disease. No organisms can be cultured from the heart valves or from the Aschoff bodies.</spoiler>
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* <spoiler text="Is this case an example of acute rheumatic fever?">Yes and no!
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This patient has acute ramifications of rheumatic fever (acute valve lesions and Aschoff bodies) but there are also a number of old lesions in the heart suggesting that this patient has had numerous bouts of rheumatic fever over the course of many years.</spoiler>
  
 
{{IPLab 9}}
 
{{IPLab 9}}
  
 
[[Category: IPLab:Lab 9]]
 
[[Category: IPLab:Lab 9]]

Revision as of 15:58, 21 August 2013

Clinical Summary[edit]

This 21-year-old black male with sickle cell anemia had recurrent attacks of acute rheumatic fever beginning at age 14. Mitral insufficiency and stenosis were present by age 16. On prophylactic antibiotics, the patient had no evidence of recurrence until three weeks before his final admission, when an upper respiratory infection developed. A few weeks later he developed acute migratory polyarthritis. This was associated with rapid deterioration of cardiac function and death.

Autopsy Findings[edit]

At autopsy, the heart was enlarged--weighing 675 grams--especially the left atrium. Both the aortic and mitral valves showed fibrosis as well as the fresh, tiny verrucae characteristic of acute rheumatic fever.

Images[edit]

Study Questions[edit]


Aortic insufficiency refers to the inability of the aortic valve to close properly, thus allowing regurgitation of blood into the left ventricle during diastole -- i.e., volume overload. Disease of the aortic valve leaflets is a common cause of insufficiency.

A normal heart weighs 300 grams (range: 270 to 360 grams).

Friable material is easily crumbled.

Autoimmune disorders involve an immune response directed at the host's own cells.