Myocarditis Typhoid

What is Myocarditis? Myocarditis is an inflammatory disease of the heart muscle; occurs predominantly in children and young men aged 15 to 25 years. Myocardial dystrophy usually affects older people, including elderly, senile and even long-lived people.

True myocarditis occurs in 0.1-1% of hospitalized patients with elevated body temperature; myocarditis syndromes are more often identified, and myocarditis as an independent disease is described only in somatic, predominantly viral, pathology. Acute infectious-toxic damage to the myocardium due to systemic infection is the dominant type of myocarditis. The clinical picture is dominated by symptoms of either myocardial damage itself or secondary cardiac dysfunction (with a shorter duration compared to myocarditis). In survivors of an acute viral disease, primary myocarditis, manifested by inflammatory cells and ECG changes, is much less often diagnosed - in most cases, only cardiac dysfunction is recorded, occurring without inflammatory changes in the myocardium. Accurate calculation of the proportion of primary and secondary myocarditis-like syndromes in acute infections allows us to determine the proportion of primary myocarditis. There was also a predominance of cases of myocarditis in HIV-uninfected people with primary diagnosis immediately during the development of an inflammatory disease with focal (venous dissemination) changes



Myocarditis Abdominal tuberculous

Myocarditis is an inflammation of the heart muscle, manifested by its soreness or contractile dysfunction. Typhoid myocarditis, a special type of inflammatory heart disease, occurs in association with dysentery (a form of salmonellosis). It is more common in young people (20–45 years old) and accounts for about 90% of all cases of typhoid myocarditis. . Typhoid fever is often preceded by some infectious disease. The duration of the disease can range from several days to several months, possibly