“…In fact, despite the significant decrease in the national prevalence of rheumatic fever (RF), left atrial calcification remains a relatively common finding on imaging, both on chest and cardiac computed tomography [2,3]. Importantly, the body of literature gives other possible causes of left atrial calcification, including mitral valve disease and mitral valve replacement, end-stage renal disease, history of radiation therapy, and non-specific endocarditis, but no study has demonstrated modern distribution of pathology [4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12]. Indeed, the modern proliferation of endomyocardial ablation techniques and catheter-directed therapies for structural heart disease, raises the question of iatrogenic damage [13,14].…”