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Heart Valve Disease Resource
Understanding Surgery for Rheumatic Heart Disease
Rheumatic heart disease a condition in which the heart valves are damaged by rheumatic fever, which is an inflammatory disease that can affect many of the bodys connective tissues, especially those in the areas of the heart, joints, brain and skin. Rheumatic fever can affect anyone however it does usually tend to occur in children from five to fifteen years old.
About Rheumatic Fever
Rheumatic fever is an inflammatory disease that can develop as a rare complication of untreated or undertreated strep throat infection. Symptoms of rheumatic fever generally appear within a few weeks after a strep throat infection, and even in untreated cases of strep throat only a very small percentage of people actually develop rheumatic fever, so it is not something that you need to worry about too much.
Symptoms of Rheumatic Heart Disease
There are a variety of symptoms of rheumatic heart disease that are basically telltale signs that you are affected, and these symptoms vary greatly from one person to another. Often the damage that is caused to the heart here is not immediately noticeable, but eventually a damaged heart can cause serious and even disabling or life-threatening problems.
Surgery for Rheumatic Heart Disease
If you find out that you do have rheumatic heart disease, then one of the options that are most likely going to be recommended by your doctor is surgery for rheumatic heart disease. Surgery for rheumatic heart disease is indicated in order to decrease valve insufficiency when heart failure persists or worsens during the acute phase after aggressive medical therapy, and mitral valve repair has also shown to be feasible in children with chronic rheumatic mitral valve disease.
Surgery for rheumatic heart disease is generally only used in advanced cases, as surgery may be necessary to repair or replace the damaged valves. The worst part of all is that because rheumatic heart disease most often strikes children, this can make the surgery process that much more difficult, because children are a lot more susceptible to problems during surgery.
Prevention
Of course the best method, in order to avoid surgery for rheumatic heart disease the best you can, is prevention. The best defense against rheumatic is to prevent rheumatic fever from ever occurring, and by treating strep throat with penicillin or other antibiotics, doctors are usually able to stop acute rheumatic fever from developing. For the people who have already had rheumatic fever, they are basically safe, although they are more susceptible to attacks and heart damage.
Now, if your heart disease is more serious, you might not want to exert yourself too much. Edema, which is a build up of excess fluid in the body tissues, is another of the most common signs of heart disease, and this occurs when blood flow out of the heart slows, the blood that is returning to the heart through the veins becomes backed up, causing fluid to build up in the tissues. While this would seem like an academic point, the truth of the matter is that many people are completely unaware that they may have heart disease. As well, of the 50 Americans who have high blood pressure 35 percent do not even know they have it, about every 29 seconds an American will suffer from a coronary event, at least 250,000 people each year die of heart attacks before they reach the hospital, half of all heart attack victims wait more than two hours before getting help, and cardiovascular diseases are the number one killer of both men and women. |