(P4) Cardiac: Rheumatic endocarditis Flashcards
Rheumatic endocarditis
- fibrinoid necrosis
- deposition of small sterile vegetations on valvar leaflets*
- fibrinoid necrosis
- Valvular deformation (mitral/aortic insufficiency/stenosis*
- Mitral Valve*
Identify slide:
This lesion is the most common manifestation of what….and a consequence of the progresson of what…which involves what?
Rheumatic endocarditis
- • Rheumatic endocarditis is the most common manifestation of rheumatic heart disease*
- • Rheumatic heart disease is a consequence of the progression of acute rheumatic fever*
- • Usually involves mitral valve (the only cause of mitral stenosis)*
Rheumatic endocarditis
Macroscopic findings
The cardinal anatomic changes of the mitral valve in chronic RHD are:
– leaflet thickening
– commissural fusion
– shortening, thickening and fusion of the tendinous cords
- Mitral valve is always involved (in 2/3 of cases it is the only valve involved) and it leads to mitral stenosis
- With tight mitral stenosis* the *left atrium progressively dilates* and may *harbor mural thrombi
identify slide
Describe the physiological involvement
and
location
- Rheumatic endocarditis*
- -Valvular involvement left sided valves*
- -Involvement of endocardium*
- and*
left-sided valves – mitral valve
- -Damage of endothelium promotes fibrinoid necrosis*
- -Formation of thrombi/emboli Perivascular region. -Inflammation concentrated near valve*
Rheumatic endocarditis
describe what is found within the cusps or along the tendinous cords and at sites of erosion:
–Inflammatory foci’s fibrinoid necrosis within the cusps or along the tendinous cords–Nonspecific chronic inflammation
–Small vegetation nodules 1-2mm – precipitation fibrin at sites of erosion with inflammation and collagen degeneration
Rheumatic endocarditis
leads to?
- Leads to stenosis or deformation of the valve
- Exudative & proliferation inflammation, valve involvement (left side)
- Fibrinoid necrosis
- Small thrombus (blood, platelets & fibrin) at the site of erosion w/inflammation
- Fibrous thickening of valve→stenosis or deformation of valve
Rheumatic endocarditis
Microscopy?
Normal myocardium.
Valve w/ large foci of fibrinoid necrosis
Name Slide:
Chronic direct consequence of this lesion is?
Rheumatic endocarditis
Valvular deformation (mitral/aortic insuficiency/stenosis)
Anatomical structure of the presented organ
(not the histological layer indicated by the name of disease!)
typically affected by this lesion is?
Rheumatic endocarditis
Mitral valve (left-sided valve)
identify structures
identify structures and slide
Rheumatic endocarditis
Rheumatic endocarditis