Carditis
Background
Carditis refers to inflammation of the heart, including the endocardium, myocardium, and/or pericardium. In the emergency department, carditis may present subtly or with life-threatening complications. Causes range from infectious (viral, bacterial, rheumatic) to autoimmune (SLE, vasculitis) or drug-induced. It is one of the major Jones criteria for acute rheumatic fever and can present in children or adolescents following a streptococcal infection. Prompt recognition is critical due to risk of valvular damage, heart failure, and arrhythmias.
Clinical Features
Presentation depends on which layer(s) of the heart are involved:
Fever, new murmur, petechiae, Osler nodes, Janeway lesions May present with embolic phenomena (e.g., stroke, hematuria)
Fatigue, chest pain, palpitations May mimic ACS or present with heart failure symptoms
Sharp, pleuritic chest pain improved by sitting up Pericardial friction rub May show diffuse ST elevation and PR depression on ECG
In rheumatic carditis, signs may include:
Tachycardia out of proportion to fever New or changing murmur (e.g., mitral regurgitation) Signs of heart failure in a previously healthy child
Differential Diagnosis
- Infective endocarditis
- Acute coronary syndrome
- Pericarditis (viral, autoimmune, uremic)
- Myocarditis (viral, toxic, autoimmune)
- Sepsis-induced cardiac dysfunction
- Valvular disease (e.g., mitral valve prolapse, aortic stenosis)
- Rheumatic fever
- Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE)
- COVID-19 or post-viral inflammatory syndrome
Evaluation
Workup
- Vitals + ECG (look for arrhythmias, PR prolongation, ST changes)
- Cardiac biomarkers (troponin, BNP)
- CXR (look for cardiomegaly, pulmonary edema)
- Echocardiogram (TTE or TEE if endocarditis suspected)
- Labs:
- CBC, CMP
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- ESR/CRP (inflammatory markers)
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- Blood cultures x2–3 (if endocarditis suspected)
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- ASO or anti-DNase B titers (if rheumatic fever suspected)
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- Throat culture or rapid strep test
- Consider:
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- ANA, rheumatoid factor (autoimmune causes)
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- COVID-19 or viral panel
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- Pericardial fluid studies if effusion and pericardiocentesis performed
Diagnosis
Myocarditis/pericarditis: clinical history, ECG findings, elevated troponin, and/or imaging
Endocarditis: Modified Duke criteria (positive blood cultures + evidence on echo or vascular/immunologic findings)
Rheumatic carditis: Based on Jones Criteria (carditis + supporting evidence of recent group A strep infection)
Management
Infectious Endocarditis
- Start broad-spectrum antibiotics after cultures (e.g., vancomycin + ceftriaxone)
- Consult infectious disease and cardiology
Myocarditis
- Supportive care (oxygen, fluids cautiously, inotropes if shock)
- Avoid NSAIDs unless pericarditis predominant
- Cardiology consult and hospital admission
Pericarditis
- NSAIDs + colchicine if viral/idiopathic
- Avoid steroids unless autoimmune etiology
- Monitor for tamponade (Beck's triad, pulsus paradoxus)
Rheumatic Carditis
- Penicillin (to eradicate strep infection)
- Aspirin or NSAIDs for arthritis/carditis
- Steroids for severe carditis or heart failure symptoms
- Bed rest and cardiology consultation
Disposition
Admit if:
- Evidence of heart failure, hypotension, or hemodynamic instability
- Troponin elevation or suspected myocarditis
- Signs of tamponade or large pericardial effusion
- Suspected or confirmed infective endocarditis
- Suspected acute rheumatic fever with carditis
Discharge may be appropriate if:
- Stable, low-risk pericarditis with no effusion
- Mild, resolving symptoms and normal cardiac studies
- Reliable follow-up with cardiology and primary care is available
- All patients with suspected carditis should have follow-up within days and cardiology consultation arranged from the ED if not admitted.
