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Rheumatic heart disease: pilot study for a population-based evaluation of prevalence and cardiovascular outcomes among schoolchildren in Nepal.
[acute rheumatic fever]
To
evaluate
a
protocol
for
a
population-based
programme
targeting
the
prevention
of
rheumatic
heart
disease
(
RHD
)
progression
by
early
echocardiographic
diagnosis
of
valvular
lesions
and
timely
implementation
of
secondary
prevention
.
Observational
survey
with
a
subsequent
prospective
cohort
study
.
Private
boarding
school
in
the
urban
area
of
the
Sunsari
district
situated
on
the
foothills
of
the
Lower
Himalayan
Range
in
Eastern
Nepal
.
Fifty
-
four
unselected
school
-going
children
5
-
15
years
of
age
,
24
girls
and
30
boys
.
Logistic
feasibility
of
a
large
-scale
population-based
screening
study
using
the
echocardiographic
criteria
formulated
by
the
World
Heart
Federation
,
with
longitudinal
follow-up
of
children
with
definite
or
borderline
RHD
in
a
prospective
cohort
study
.
Standardised
interview
,
physical
examination
and
screening
echocardiography
were
performed
in
a
three
-staged
process
and
took
approximately
6
min
per
child
.
Socio-economic
status
was
assessed
using
surrogate
markers
such
as
the
occupation
of
the
primary
caregiver
,
numbers
of
rooms
at
home
,
car
,
television
,
cell
phone
and
internet
connection
.
Physical
examination
was
focused
on
cardiac
auscultation
and
signs
of
acute
rheumatic
fever
and
targeted
echocardiography
was
performed
by
an
independent
examiner
without
knowledge
of
the
clinical
findings
.
Two
children
with
evidence
of
borderline
RHD
were
re
-examined
at
B
.
P
.
Koirala
Institute
of
Health
Sciences
and
the
indication
for
secondary
antibiotic
prevention
was
discussed
with
the
parents
and
the
children
.
At
6
months
of
follow-up
,
echocardiographic
findings
were
stable
in
both
children
.
Implementation
of
secondary
antibiotic
prevention
was
challenged
by
impaired
awareness
of
subclinical
RHD
among
parents
and
inadequate
cooperation
with
family
physicians
.
This
pilot
study
shows
that
the
methods
outlined
in
the
protocol
can
be
translated
into
a
large
-scale
population-based
study
.
We
learned
that
education
and
collaboration
with
teachers
,
parents
and
family
physicians
/
paediatricians
will
be
of
key
importance
in
order
to
establish
a
sustainable
programme
.