What is rheumatoid arthritis?
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a disease that causes pain,
stiffness, swelling, and loss of motion in the joints between your
bones. It occurs most often in the fingers, wrists, elbows,
shoulders, jaw, hips, knees, and toes. In some cases it may also
affect parts of the body other than joints.
How does it occur?
RA is an autoimmune disease, a disease in which the body attacks
its own tissues. Doctors don't know the exact cause.
How does it affect the heart?
RA appears to increase the risk of developing heart disease. This
makes it especially important for people with RA to quit smoking
and control high blood pressure and high cholesterol.
The rheumatoid process can cause an inflammation of the
pericardium (tissue sac covering the heart). The inflammation,
called pericarditis, usually causes no symptoms and needs no
treatment. In rare cases, the inflammation may cause fluid to
build up in the sac. The fluid may need to be drained for the
heart to work normally.
RA may also cause little bumps or nodules to form in the tissue of
the heart valves. Rarely, these nodules deform the valve and cause
it to leak. Most of these leaks are tiny and do not affect the way
the heart works.
What are the symptoms?
Rheumatoid arthritis rarely causes heart symptoms. There may be
chest pain and or shortness of breath from pericarditis.
How are the heart problems diagnosed?
Your healthcare provider will listen to your heart with a
stethoscope. An echocardiogram, or ultrasound picture of the
heart, will show if pericardial fluid is present.
How are they treated?
There is no treatment known to keep rheumatoid arthritis from
affecting your heart. Pericarditis is treated effectively with
anti-inflammatory drugs. Valve problems may be treated with
surgery.
Written by Donald L. Warkentin, MD.
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
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