Acute rheumatic fever. A vanishing disease in suburbia
M. A. Land and A. L. Bisno
We undertook a retrospective analysis of the incidence of acute rheumatic
fever (ARF) in Memphis-Shelby County during the five-year period from 1977
through 1981. Cases were identified by review of local hospital records and
by mail and telephone communication with 327 primary care physicians and
neurologists. Forty-one patients met the modified Jones criteria, of whom
16 had conditions that were diagnosed in Memphis but who resided elsewhere.
The overall ARF incidence among Memphis-Shelby County residents was 0.64
cases per 100,000 population each year. The highest rate, 3.74, was found
among blacks aged 5 to 17 years residing in the inner city, while white
children in the suburban and rural areas had a rate of only 0.49. Current
strategies for prevention and diagnosis of ARF must take into account the
extraordinarily low level to which the incidence of the disease has fallen
in certain suburban US populations.
Epidemiology and prevention of valvular heart diseases and infective endocarditis in Africa
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Differences Among International Pharyngitis Guidelines: Not Just Academic
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Van Howe and Kusnier
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Asian Cardiovasc. Thorac. Ann. 2001;9:41-44.
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Cerebral Vasculitis in a Case of Sydenham's Chorea
Ryan and Antony
J Child Neurol 1999;14:815-818.
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Acute Rheumatic Fever with Advanced Degree AV Block
Venu Reddy et al.
CLIN PEDIATR 1989;28:326-328.
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Incidence of Acute Rheumatic Fever: A Suburban Community Hospital Experience During the 1970s
Schwartz et al.
CLIN PEDIATR 1983;22:798-801.
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Where Has All the Rheumatic Fever Gone?: An Editorial Commentary
Bisno
CLIN PEDIATR 1983;22:804-806.