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Rheumatic fever can affect the heart due to an autoimmune response triggered by a streptococcal throat infection. The body's immune system mistakenly attacks its own tissues, particularly the heart valves and muscle, leading to inflammation known as rheumatic Heart disease. This damage can cause long-term complications, including valvular heart disease and heart failure, due to scarring and dysfunction of the heart structures. Early treatment of strep throat is crucial to prevent rheumatic fever and its cardiac complications.

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1w ago

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Why does rheumatic heart disease only affect the left side of the heart?

Rheumatic heart disease only affects the left side of the heart because the valves that are damaged by Rheumatic fever are on the left side of the heart. A physician would be the best person to answer this question.


How can you prevent rheumatic fever?

You cant prevent rheumatic fever,because you get Rheumatic Fever by frequent Strep Throat Infections.So the best way to prevent Rheumatic Fever would be preventing Strep Throat Infections. :) hope that helps! :)))) this website heps lots! : http://www.mayoclinic.org/rheumatic-fever/treatment.html


Can you prevent Rheumatic fever?

You cant prevent rheumatic fever,because you get Rheumatic Fever by frequent Strep Throat Infections.So the best way to prevent Rheumatic Fever would be preventing Strep Throat Infections. :) hope that helps! :)))) this website heps lots! : http://www.mayoclinic.org/rheumatic-fever/treatment.html


When you have the flu does your heart rate rise?

I would think so. Fever does make your heart rate higher and with the flu comes high fever.


How does sports video game affect heart rate?

The only way it would affect your heart rate is if you got excited or nervous, which would raise your heart rate.


Would throwing up affect your heart tablets?

No it wouldn't


Does Soma affect your heart How does soma affect your heart?

Well since Soma is a muscle relaxer and your heart is a muscle I'm pretty sure it would relax it by slowing it down. So your heart rate would probably drop as well as your blood pressure.


What will happen if a person has untreated strep throat?

If strep goes untreated, most people get over it naturally. A number of people have had strep for years and then gotten over it. Modern medicine greatly speeds up the healing process. With some people, it would become a chronic disease constantly causing pain. With a small group, it would lead to death.


Can you use mustard oil for rheumatic problems?

You can, but I doubt it would help you.


What caused rheumatic fever in the civil war?

Rheumatic fever is a common disease in military operations. Streptococcus pyogenese, known as Strep A, or beta hemolyic Streptococcus or GAS, has the capability to be non-symptomatically carried and can even exist "intracellularly"within cells of the pharynx (it is known) in a semi-dormant state, and in the current population in America, probably 5 -15 percent of people are carriers (Rheumatic Fever and Streptococcal Infections, Benedict Massell, MD, Harvard Press, 1997). The microorganism can be carried on the skin, in tonsillar crypts, in the sinuses, pharynx, adenoids, recesses near the vocal cords, and in the lungs. It can be carried in the vagina, around the anus, and one source found it within the gastrointestinal tract, and on fomites, that are inanimate objects humans touch. It is the microorganism that has killed millions of women and new borns due to child bed fever that Semmelweiss decreased by simply washing hands and being clean with women in childbirth. He was "run out of Vienna" for being different! Pasteur found it on the teats of cows. In general, in early America, before pasteurizaion, when farm families drank "cows milk", many of them became infected. Certain Russian information indicates that all domestic animals are carriers of Streptococcus pyogens. Rheumatic fever has decreased since the civil war time when a so many men experienced it. The ones who had it probably had high-grade cases so it was identified, but probably a much greater percentage had lower grade cases and it was thought to be the "flu" diarrhea, headaches, back pain, or a pneumonia like disease. It is a great chameleon! Information indicates that 160,000 soldiers in the civil war had acute rheumatism (which is an old name for rheumatic fever), rheumatic fever, infectious arthritis, or gout. There is a question about, infectious arthritis, but people with rheumatic fever have an infectous fever and if it is severe they have arthritis, so it may be another name for rheumatic fever. 12,000 troops were discharged for chronic pheuistic fever and reactive arthritis. That is not a current word, but it seems to be a pulmonary disease with reactive arthritis and that kind of a presentation could be a rheumatic fever-like disease also, but chronic and held on for some time. Sir William Osler, in his famous text, "Principles and Practices of Medicine, indicates that scarlet fever (similar to rheumatic fever) could be high-grade, subacute or less than subacute and chronic. Rheumatic fever can also present highly variably. Rheumatic and Scarlet fever are the same disease except the Streptococcus pyogenes that causes scarlet fever can excrete erythrotoxin A B or C and so a more or less, specific rash can be developed. Rheumatic fever/scarlet fever is a crowd disease. That is why it appears so commonly in military organizations! When a group of people are assembled for three to six weeks, live close together in a semi-stable group, Streptococcus pyogenes can be spread from person to person and become more pathological. This process is termed, passage. The microorganism has such a complex genetic make up, it can evolve virulence by passing from one individual to the next. Naturally, lack of great hygeine that often exists when a group of men "camp out" is important. Lack of changes of clothes, chilliness, living in close proximity with people moving in and out, with some of them being carriers of virulent strains made the perfect situation for Streptoccus pyogenes to spread amonst the troops. Now, the crux: No one gets immune to Streptococcus pyogenes and we all contract it many times in our lives. Get on a bus, a train or an airplane and three people sneeze: watch out. Usually we have decent sized houses and small families and so, normally, Streptococcus is not distributed as rapidly between people so it generates great virulence. Schools are great places for Streptococcus pyogenes to spread between children and for them to bring the more virulent types home: good reason to home school children. Every time an individual contracts a Streptococcus pyogenes infection it causes an immune response, however, with Streptococcus pyogenes it also causes an autoimmune response. The orgamism has at least 12 complex molecules in its wall that mimic human tissue! That permits the microorganism to invade its hosts (people, dogs, cats, horses, pigs, goats (information from Russian literature, V. Navonova, Russian Academy of Sciences)), and it is spread between all vertebrates: it is a zooinosis, that is a microorganism that can exist in a subset of hosts, and be transfered to humans. Some of the antibodies humans make to contest the many antigens on Streptococcus pyogenes are autoantigens, they attack the microorganism, which is good, but they also attack ourselves. This is termed an autoimmune response. It causes arthritis, various types of heart disease, including valve disease, but also pericarditis and others. It can affect the kidneys and the brain and cause various mental changes such as Tourette's syndrome, St. Vitus' Dance, and other mental problems. Acutely, it can cause seizures, stupor, epilepsy, acute carditis and congestive heart failue and cardiac arrhythmia and death. If people have high-grade rheumatic fever: they experience a great amount of pain. So, to get back to the question, rheumatic fever affected the civil war troops, because all the elements of its epidemiology were present: large groups of people living semi-continuously together, poor personal hygeine, new people coming into the area frequently, and carriers of the microorganism. Probably, I think, also, was the commonality of using cows milk without pasteurization, at least "on the farm" whereat many troops had lived before they went into the army. The microorganism is very complex and, for instance, one of the virulent factors, M protein, has over one-hundred known variatiations and there are many other virulence factors on, or secreted by, the microorganism. In the above text by Massell, it indicates that many epidemics and pandemics of rheumatic fever/scarlet fever have taken place. Newsholme, an English epidemiologist, probably in the late 1800's, indicated that the disease was endemic in Europe and North America and from time to time would be in epidemic proportions. That happened in the American Civil War. Rheumatic fever declined in frequency from the 1920's and kept declining, but in WW II there were 1,000,000 of Strep infection and something like 60,000 cases of rheumatic fever in the Navy alone. I read somewhere that in 1965 more Americans, under 30 yrs., died of rheumatic fever, than any other infectious disease! It kept becoming less frequent until about 1985, and then it started coming back. Veasey, in Salt Lake City wrote a paper about it. Many papers have followed. It has showed up in military camps again, a number of times: Great Lakes Training Station, for one. One thing though, 99% of physicians do not know anything about it. Most doctors are this and that specialist and do not even deal with "people being sick" at home or on the street. If a person has a medical problem nowadays, and has this or that polyp, blocked artery, stroke, rash, colitis, lung problem and see "the appropriate specialist" and no one figures out rheumatic fever: because it is a systemic, autoimmune disease and it can affect all tissues and therefore organs in its own way. So, if you go to the doc with rheumaic fever nowadays, you will usually get a wrong diagnosis: fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue syndrome, pneumonia with complications, viral meningitis, death because of opiates, sudden ischemic cardiac death, and the list goes on and on. I usually do not know too much about any disease because I was a general practitioner for thirty years. I learned, the hard way, however, that I practiced in a nidus of rheumatic fever. It took me two years of 10 to 14 hour days to figure it out. Another reason I can write the above "out of my brain" is that I am nearly finished with a book, Rheumatism, Enigma Unraveled" and it tells the true, full story, about rheumatic fever and all the things that it does to a person. It will be on the market in about 5 months, I suppose. Hint: what do you think the Vietnam War, Gulf War, and Desert Storm syndromes are: yup, the manifestations of rheumatic fever. In the book: 400 pages nearly. It is well researched and well documented.


What is slightly enlarge heart?

The heart enlarges to compensate for conditions in the body that affect heart flow and functions of the heart. It would be more telling to know which side of the heart is enlarged or if the whole heart.


Some babies are born with an opening between the left and right ventricles of the heart How would this heart deffect affect the ability of the cardiovascular system to deliver oxygen to body cells?

It would affect it because the body cells would not be getting oxygen.