Wesam Mulla, Anan Younis, Sana Zahalka, Anat Wieder, Dafna Yahav, Amitai Segev, Israel Mazin, Raphael Kuperstein, Michael Arad, Shlomi Matetzky, Roy Beigel
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Reports of nonrheumatic streptococcal pharyngitis associated myocarditis (SPAM) are rare, and its incidence, pathophysiology, and clinical features remain unclear. We evaluated the clinical course and outcome of patients diagnosed with nonrheumatic SPAM, with a particular focus on differentiating it from other etiologies of myocarditis.
Methods: Seventy-nine consecutive individuals (age 32±9 years, 71 men) with clinically diagnosed SPAM were evaluated. None satisfied the revised Jones criteria for diagnosis of acute rheumatic fever.
Results: Average onset of symptoms prior to hospitalization was 5.44±5.16 days, all had sore throat and were treated with antibiotics for 10 days; Clinical presentation consisted mostly with chest pain (91%), fever (90%), electrocardiographic ST-segment elevation (80%), and biochemical evidence of myocyte necrosis (100%). In 27 cases, coronary angiography was performed and in all either normal or nonsignificant coronary artery disease was found. Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging was done in 61 cases and demonstrated subepicardial late gadolinium enhancement (90%) predominantly in the lateral (85%) and inferior (75%) sides.
Conclusions: Nonrheumatic SPAM may not be as infrequent as thought and should be considered in the differential diagnosis of acute ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction, especially in male patients with sore throat and fever.
期刊介绍:
The American Journal of Medicine - "The Green Journal" - publishes original clinical research of interest to physicians in internal medicine, both in academia and community-based practice. AJM is the official journal of the Alliance for Academic Internal Medicine, a prestigious group comprising internal medicine department chairs at more than 125 medical schools across the U.S. Each issue carries useful reviews as well as seminal articles of immediate interest to the practicing physician, including peer-reviewed, original scientific studies that have direct clinical significance and position papers on health care issues, medical education, and public policy.