Australia Aboriginal people living in the Top End of the Northern Territory and the Kimberly regions experience among the highest incidence rates
of rheumatic heart disease in the world.
Today, most people in the United States rarely think
of rheumatic heart disease (RHD)-- or the rheumatic fever that causes it — as more than a historical footnote.
Not exact matches
If you don't treat the infection with the appropriate antibiotics in time, there is a chance
of development
of rheumatic fever or
heart damage in extreme cases.
«Double danger: The peril
of childbirth for women with
rheumatic heart disease.»
Not only do they cause several million cases
of strep throat every year, but also can lead to more severe infections, such as flesh - eating disease and acute
rheumatic heart disease,» Kumaraswami said.
As part
of that effort, rheumatologists and cardiologists established Mayo's Cardio - Rheumatology Clinic two years ago to pioneer new
heart disease diagnostic, prevention and treatment tools for patients with rheumatoid arthritis and other
rheumatic diseases.
In the mid-1940s, the Department
of Defense commissioned researchers, led by infectious disease scientist Charles Rammelkamp, to study whether treating strep with penicillin would also prevent
rheumatic heart disease, then a serious problem among troops.
Scientists have mapped the genome
of a bacterium responsible for the
heart - damaging illness known as acute
rheumatic fever.
Dr. Thite is the President
of the local chapter
of an organization
of Ayurvedic Physicians in India, has been practicing clinically for over 25 years, been a research assistant and has presented papers on Liver diseases,
Rheumatic heart disease, Abdominal pain, Diseases
of urinary system and diabetes and much more.
However, it's important to bear in mind that
heart disease risk isn't limited to Ankylosing Spondylitis only; a vast majority
of rheumatic diseases are linked with higher odds
of cardiovascular diseases.
While in Switzerland, «where plunges in the snow were part
of the program to build physical endurance, [Müller] developed
rheumatic fever which severely weakened his
heart.»
According to a government data, «The prevalence
of heart failure in India due to coronary
heart disease, hypertension, obesity, diabetes and
rheumatic heart disease ranges from anywhere between 1.3 to 4.6 million, with an annual incidence
of 491,600 to 1.8 million.»
Rates
of diseases associated with poor environmental health (including water and food borne diseases, trachoma, tuberculosis and
rheumatic heart disease)
Rheumatic heart disease is almost uniquely a disease
of Aboriginal people in Australia.
The reaction causes inflammation in
heart valves (part
of the condition known as
rheumatic fever).
A critical aspect is to help communities take ownership
of ways to target
rheumatic heart disease as a condition requiring attention, provide leadership and training within health services, connect the health service with clients, families and communities, and engage other services outside
of the health system.
The substantial continuing health and social inequalities faced by Indigenous Australians are increasingly well recognised and documented.1 The broad sociocultural influence on serious Indigenous health issues, such as diabetes and
rheumatic heart disease, is also well recognised; poverty, lack
of cultural security and a paucity
of appropriate staff within health services for Indigenous people are evident contributors.2 - 4
Indigenous Australians die from preventable diseases such as
rheumatic heart disease, eradicated among the rest
of the Australian population and they have lower access to primary health care and health infrastructure that the rest
of Australia takes for granted.