| Literature DB >> 26896274 |
A K M Monwarul Islam1, A A S Majumder2.
Abstract
Rheumatic fever (RF) and rheumatic heart disease (RHD) are the most-common cardiovascular disease in young people aged <25 years, globally. They are important contributors to cardiovascular morbidity and mortality in Bangladesh. Classical risk factors, i.e. poverty, overcrowding, ignorance, and insufficient health care services were responsible for the high incidence and prevalence of these diseases over the last century. In concert with the progresses in socioeconomic indicators, advances in health sectors, improved public awareness, and antibiotic prophylaxis, acute RF came into control. However, chronic RHD continues to be prevalent, and the actual disease burden may be much higher. RHD predominantly affects the young adults, seriously incapacitates them, follows a protracted course, gets complicated because of delayed diagnosis and is sometimes maltreated. The treatment is often palliative and expensive. Large-scale epidemiological and clinical researches are needed to formulate evidence-based national policy to tackle this important public health issue in future.Entities:
Keywords: Acute rheumatic fever; Bangladesh; Pharyngitis; Rheumatic heart diseases; Streptococcus
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26896274 PMCID: PMC4759488 DOI: 10.1016/j.ihj.2015.07.039
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Indian Heart J ISSN: 0019-4832
Prevalence of RF and RHD in Bangladesh.
| Reference | Year | Place | Age (years) | RF & RHD prevalence | No. screened | Echo | Type of study |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Malik | 1976 | Dhaka City and a village | Different ages | 7.5/1000, combined RF and RHD | 7062 | No | Community project |
| Hussain | 1984 | Rural | Different ages | 7.8/1000 | No | Community project | |
| Ahmed et al. | 1991 | Rural | 5–15 | RF 1.2/1000; RHD 1.3/1000 | 5923 | Yes, in selected cases | Community project |
| Haque et al. | 1992 | Dhaka City and rural areas | 5–15 | 3.6/1000, combined RF and RHD | Urban 9875, rural 5923 | Yes, in selected cases | School and house to house survey |
| Hossain et al. | 2005–2006 | Dhaka City | 5–22 | RF 0.5/1000; RHD 0.4/1000 | 10,017 | Yes, in selected cases | Community project |
| Banoo et al. | 1984–1985 | Dhaka City | 4–17 | RF 43.9/1000; RHD 5.05/1000 | 4349 | No | School survey |
| Janan | 1978–1979 | Dhaka City | 5–25 | RF 8.5/1000 | 3428 | No | School survey; studied RF cases only |
| Mahmud et al. | 1989 | Dhaka City | 5–18 | RF 0.85/1000; RHD 2.8/1000 | 5011 | Yes, in selected cases | School survey |
| Begum et al. | 1990–1991 | Dhaka City | 5–18 | RF 2.37/1000; RHD 0.189/1000 | 10,538 | Yes, in selected cases | School survey |
| Majumder et al. | 2004 | Rural | 5–16 | RF 4.22/1000; RHD 0/1000 | No | School survey | |
RF: rheumatic fever; RHD: rheumatic heart disease.
Prevalence of streptococcal sore throat in Bangladesh.
| Reference | Year | Place | Age (years) | No. screened | Culture positive for BHS (%) | Group A BHS (% of BHS) | ASO titer |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chowdhury and Rahman | 1982–1984 | Dhaka City | Different ages | 7542 | 20.22% | 17.11% > 200 Todd units | |
| Hussain and Rahman | 1987 | Dhaka City | Different ages | 1510 | 19.3% | ||
| Rouf et al. | 1992 | Patients attending NCCRF&HD | 5–15 | 2224 | 18.3% | 20.8% | |
| Rouf et al. | 1992 | Dhaka City | 5–15; school children | 329 | 33.0% | 7.6% | 100–300 IU/ml in 88% |
| Faruq et al. | 1993 | Dhaka City | School children | 601 | 22% | 18.9% | 39% of BHS positives has raised ASO titer |
| Ahmed et al. | 1999 | Narayangonj | School children | 6890 total; 2175 sore throat | 19.68% of sore throat cases | 21.5% | |
| Haque et al. | 2001 | Dhaka | <10 | 200 | 11% | ||
NCCRF&HD: National Centre for Control of Rheumatic Fever and Heart Diseases, Dhaka, Bangladesh; BHS: beta hemolytic streptococcus; ASO: anti-streptolysin O.