scholarly journals A case presentation on rheumatic heart disease with mitral regurgitation

Author(s):  
Jayasudha A ◽  
Sreerenjini B ◽  
Kaveri P ◽  
Anitha P

In pregnancy there is increased pressure on the heart valves. Counseling of women with rheumatic heart disease gives appropriate surveillance of maternal and fetal well being, as well as planning and documentation of the management of elective and emergency delivery. However, many women with rheumatic heart disease have healthy pregnancies, healthy babies with the right medical care.

2019 ◽  
Vol 09 (01) ◽  
pp. 28-30
Author(s):  
Jayasudha A. ◽  
Sreerenjini B. ◽  
Kaveri P. ◽  
Anitha P.

AbstractDuring any pregnancy there is an increase in blood volume of 30 to 50% resulting in increased pressure on the heart valves. For women with rheumatic heart disease this increased pressure presents increased maternal and/or fetal risks. Counseling of women with rheumatic heart disease gives appropriate surveillance of maternal and fetal well-being, as well as planning and documentation of the management of elective and emergency delivery. The care of pregnant women with rheumatic heart disease thus requires a multidisciplinary approach, involving obstetricians, cardiologists, and anesthetists. However, many women with rheumatic heart disease have healthy pregnancies and healthy babies with the right medical care.


Author(s):  
Dhivya Sethuraman ◽  
Nirmala Ramachandran ◽  
SAP Noorjahan ◽  
Vijay Kanna

2020 ◽  
Vol 60 (2) ◽  
pp. 302-308
Author(s):  
Chris O. Ongzalima ◽  
Melanie Greenland ◽  
Geraldine Vaughan ◽  
Andre Ng ◽  
Jordan A. Fitz‐Gerald ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bruno R Nascimento ◽  
Craig Sable ◽  
Maria Carmo P Nunes ◽  
Kaciane K B Oliveira ◽  
Juliane Franco ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Impact of heart disease (HD) on pregnancy is significant. Objective We aimed to evaluate the feasibility of integrating screening echocardiography (echo) into the Brazilian prenatal primary care to assess HD prevalence. Methods Over 13 months, 20 healthcare workers acquired simplified echo protocols, utilizing hand-held machines (GE-VSCAN), in 22 primary care centres. Consecutive pregnant women unaware of HD underwent focused echo, remotely interpreted in USA and Brazil. Major HD was defined as structural valve abnormalities, more than mild valve dysfunction, ventricular systolic dysfunction/hypertrophy, or other major abnormalities. Screen-positive women were referred for standard echo. Results At total, 1 112 women underwent screening. Mean age was 27 ± 8 years, mean gestational age 22 ± 9 weeks. Major HD was found in 100 (9.0%) patients. More than mild mitral regurgitation was observed in 47 (4.2%), tricuspid regurgitation in 11 (1.0%), mild left ventricular dysfunction in 4 (0.4%), left ventricular hypertrophy in 2 (0.2%) and suspected rheumatic heart disease in 36 (3.2%): all, with mitral valve and two with aortic valve (AV) involvement. Other AV disease was observed in 11 (10%). In 56 screen-positive women undergoing standard echo, major HD was confirmed in 45 (80.4%): RHD findings in 12 patients (all with mitral valve and two with AV disease), mitral regurgitation in 40 (14 with morphological changes, 10 suggestive of rheumatic heart disease), other AV disease in two (mild/moderate regurgitation). Conclusions Integration of echo screening into primary prenatal care is feasible in Brazil. However, the low prevalence of severe disease urges further investigations about the effectiveness of the strategy.


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