Abstract
The writer Bertolt Brecht (1898-1956) is known for his poems, dramas and the "epic or dialectical theater" he founded. He was retrospectively postulated to have had rheumatic fever because of heart problems and neuromuscular symptoms in his youth. Based on current rheumatological knowledge, it cannot be deduced with certainty from the available documents that Brecht had rheumatic fever. At most, avery unusual manifestation of rheumatic fever can be suspected with atypical rheumatic chorea and avery atypical course of rheumatic carditis. Several deviations from the classical clinical picture-the absence of fever and arthritis, no typical symptoms of Sydenham's chorea, the lack of a diagnosis of heart valve defects in adolescence-lead to extensive differential diagnostic considerations. Apossible psychosomatic origin through functional heart complaints must even be postulated if atemporary previous organic cause cannot be excluded. Only the use of the advanced diagnostics available today with Doppler sonography of the heart, cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), throat swabs for Streptococci and streptococcal serology would have made it possible to diagnose Brecht's cardiac symptoms in his adolescence without adoubt and to differentiate them from functional heart complaints. His death is verified by medical documents clearly documenting bacterial endocarditis with evidence of coli bacteria caused by urological interventions with subsequent febrile episodes and pyelonephritis.
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