# A Neurological Curtain Unmasking Rheumatic Carditis in Early Adolescents: Two Illustrative Cases From a Tertiary Care Center in Maharashtra, India

**Authors:** Smita V Mohod, Priyanka M Chandankhede, Khushboo Agarwal, Gopal Agrawal, Pravin Salame

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.90746 · Cureus · 2025-08-22

## TL;DR

Two cases show that Sydenham's chorea can be the only sign of rheumatic fever in adolescents, highlighting the need for echocardiography and better healthcare access in low-resource areas.

## Contribution

Highlights Sydenham's chorea as an isolated clinical sign of ARF in early adolescents, emphasizing the importance of echocardiography and healthcare access in resource-limited settings.

## Key findings

- Sydenham's chorea can be the sole clinical manifestation of ARF in adolescents.
- Echocardiography revealed subclinical carditis in both cases despite no obvious signs.
- Nutritional deficiencies and healthcare access barriers were identified as contributing factors.

## Abstract

Group A β-hemolytic streptococcal pharyngitis, if inadequately treated, can trigger an autoimmune inflammatory response known as acute rheumatic fever (ARF). While ARF classically presents with migratory arthritis, carditis, and other Jones criteria, it may also manifest as Sydenham’s chorea, a delayed neurological complication. In some patients, chorea can occur as the sole clinical feature, making diagnosis challenging. Importantly, these individuals may harbor subclinical carditis, valvular inflammation, and dysfunction detectable only by echocardiography, which, if missed, can progress to chronic rheumatic heart disease (RHD), a major cause of morbidity and mortality in resource-limited settings. We report early adolescent cases presenting with Sydenham chorea as the initial and only clinical sign of ARF. Both children, enrolled in primary school and belonging to lower socioeconomic families, showed no history of arthritis or obvious signs of carditis. Although ECG findings were non-specific, 2D echocardiography revealed subclinical carditis in both cases. Laboratory results showed raised erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) and high anti-streptolysin O (ASO) titers, indicating inflammatory and possible cardiac involvement. Nutritional insufficiencies were also observed, adding to the children's vulnerability. Early treatment with benzathine penicillin and symptomatic management of chorea were initiated, and families were educated about the need for long-term secondary prophylaxis. However, barriers such as the cost and availability of injections at distant healthcare centers remain major concerns. Sydenham chorea can present as an isolated sign of ARF. These cases highlight the importance of early echocardiographic evaluation and the need to strengthen primary healthcare services to ensure timely diagnosis and continuous secondary prevention, particularly in resource-limited settings.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** acute rheumatic fever (MONDO:0017767), rheumatic heart disease (MONDO:0006955)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** neurological complication (MESH:D002493), autoimmune inflammatory (MESH:D007249), Sydenham chorea (MESH:D002819), Nutritional insufficiencies (MESH:D000309), arthritis (MESH:D001168), Group A beta-hemolytic streptococcal pharyngitis (MESH:D013290), Rheumatic Carditis (MESH:D009205), and dysfunction (MESH:D006331), ARF (MESH:D012213), RHD (MESH:D012214)
- **Chemicals:** benzathine penicillin (MESH:D010401)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

18 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12579752/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12579752