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Query: UMLS:C0004610 (
bacteremia
)
13,199
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Infective endocarditis is a serious disease and should be, if possible, prevented. Two risk groups are classified in relation to the patient's underlying cardiac lesions. At high risk are patients with prosthetic valves or with a previous infective endocarditis. Patients with congenital and acquired heart disease, mitral valve prolapse with
regurgitation
and hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy are at moderate risk. Patients of these two groups should receive antibiotic prophylaxis before dental or surgical procedures that cause
bacteremia
. For patients at moderate risk a single dose of an orally administered antibiotic should be given one hour before the procedure (e.g. amoxicillin 3 g for procedures of the oropharyngeal, gastrointestinal or genitourinary tract, where the causitive agents of endocarditis are Viridans streptococci or enterococci). Multiple doses are recommended for patients at high risk. The combination of amoxicillin and gentamicin (vancomycin and gentamicin in penicillin-allergic patients) offers the widest margin of safety in high-risk patients.
...
PMID:[Antibiotic prevention of bacterial endocarditis]. 185 64
The authors discuss the clinical utility and feasibility of trans-esophageal echocardiography. Between April and October 1988, 385 examinations were performed in 320 patients (mean age: 54 yr, range: 17-89). In 9 patients (2.4 p. 100), the transesophageal transducer could not be introduced. The only complication was one case of
bacteremia
without sequela, that occurred early in our use of this technique. Transesophageal echocardiography proved to be useful in the following indications: mitral stenosis (n = 50), mainly by detecting thromboses of the left atrium (n = 5); infectious endocarditis (n = 21), especially for diagnosing aortic ring abscesses (n = 3); severe mitral insufficiency (n = 26), to assess the mechanism of
regurgitation
and to visualize chordal rupture (n = 13). We conclude from this preliminary study that transesophageal echocardiography is particularly useful in the pathologies described above as a complementary procedure to conventional echocardiography.
...
PMID:[Transesophageal echography. Value of the technic apropos of a preliminary experiment in 320 patients (385 examinations)]. 261 Apr 49
The bacterial species Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae is found worldwide as a commensal or a pathogen in a variety of animals. One well-defined pattern of human infection is an uncommon bacteremic form, with or without cutaneous involvement, usually complicated by endocarditis. We report the case of a 38-year-old male butcher with E. rhusiopathiae
bacteremia
, native aortic valve endocarditis and perivalvular abscess. The patient was released after six weeks of intravenous ceftriaxone and aortic valve replacement because of severe
regurgitation
.
...
PMID:[Infective endocarditis with perivalvular abscess in a patient with Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae bacteremia]. 1215 10
A 26-year old Japanese woman experienced new aortic valve
regurgitation
associated with a preceding high fever of unknown cause. During the fever episode, although
bacteremia
or fungemia was not evident despite frequent blood cultures, intravenous panipenem/betamipron (PAPM/BP) gradually resulted in decline of the fever. Echocardiography and operative procedures revealed a quadricuspid aortic valve (QAV), which was composed of two equal larger cusps and two unequal smaller cusps (type f). A smaller accessory cusp was damaged but showed no active vegetation. A Medtronic Freestyle bioprosthesis was implanted using a subcoronary technique. Although the risk of endocarditis for this rare valve abnormality is not well documented, the present case may support the conventional assumption that patients with unequal small cusps are prone to endocarditis.
...
PMID:Infective endocarditis associated with quadricuspid aortic valve. 1282 12
We report the case of a 51-year-old woman who underwent mitral valve replacement for prolapse with severe
regurgitation
, depressed ejection fraction, and atrial fibrillation. Two weeks post-operatively, a transesophageal echocardiogram was performed for
bacteremia
. The patient was found incidentally to have a large free-floating ball thrombus in the left atrium. The patient was managed with anticoagulation because of the high-risk nature of repeat surgery. One month following diagnosis, the patient still had persistent thrombus in the left atrium seen on transthoracic echocardiography despite therapeutic anticoagulation. Free-floating ball thrombus is a rare and dramatic finding seen on echocardiography in patients with mitral valve disease.
...
PMID:Free-floating left atrial ball thrombus following mitral valve replacement. 1590 Dec 98
Prevention of postoperative wound infection in dermatologic surgery and appropriate use of antibiotics to prevent endocarditis and joint-replacement infections are controversial issues. Dermatologists often may misunderstand the use of antibiotics to prevent endocarditis, surgical site infections, and prosthesis infections. In order to prevent endocarditis associated with surgical procedures, the American Heart Association (AHA) has developed clinical practice guidelines that apply to surgical patients with prosthetic cardiac valves, previous bacterial endocarditis, mitral valve prolapse with valvular
regurgitation
, or thickened leaflets. For these patients, the AHA recommends that antistaphylococcal antibiotics (eg, cephalosporins) be given before surgery only when the procedure involves significant risk of
bacteremia
(eg, incision into infected tissues). Routine dermatologic surgery of intact skin with sterile technique usually does not require prophylaxis. Antibiotic prophylaxis may also be justified in surgical patients who are at moderate to high risk for wound site infection. Patients should be given prophylactic antibiotics shortly before surgery or as soon as the risk is recognized. In patients allergic to penicillin, cross reactions are unlikely for most second- and third-generation agents (cefdinir, cefuroxime, cefixime, ceftibuten), because these agents lack a side chain similar to penicillin. By identifying the risk of infection, being aware of the risks of antibiotic therapy, and weighing the risks and benefits of each option, dermatologists can devise individualized treatments, thus optimizing outcomes of their patients.
...
PMID:Perioperative use of antibiotics: preventing and treating perioperative infections. 1630 Feb 29
Infectious endocarditis is a systemic disease associated with high morbidity and mortality. Clinical recognition and effective management is challenging, but insights can be gleaned from relevant pathologic features. Risk factors include subaortic stenosis, possibly certain other congenital anomalies, and
bacteremia
. Auscultation can provide clues regarding valvular involvment, particularly when a diastolic left basilar murmur of aortic valve
regurgitation
is present. Aortic valve vegetations and insufficiency may also alter femoral arterial pulse characteristics. Echocardiography may facilitate diagnosis, particularly with aortic valve lesions, but may not be able to distinguish between small mitral valve vegetations and early chronic degenerative valve disease. Vegetative lesions develop along edges of valve closure on the ventricular aspect of the aortic valve and the atrial surface of atrioventricular valves. They may extend across valve leaflet, from valves to adjacent left atrial endocardium, interventricular or interatrial septum, or chordae tendineae. Vegetations can be friable and frequently embolize to spleen, kidney, and left ventricle - often before clinical recognition of the disease. Valvular insufficiency develops as a consequence of valvular vegetations, necrosis, perforation, or rupture of the chordae tendineae. Histopathologic appearance varies with respect to duration of disease and antimicrobial therapy. These factors influence the amount of necrotic material, blood clot, fibrin, and inflammatory cells which make up the vegetations. Bacteria are not always identified in valvular lesions, especially following antibacterial therapy, but may be detected in other organs. Common sequellae include congestive heart failure, sepsis, arrhythmias, and systemic organ infarction.
...
PMID:Pathologic and clinical features of infectious endocarditis. 1908 8
The diagnosis of infective endocarditis (IE) must be made as soon as possible to initiate antimicrobial therapy and identify patients at high risk for complications who may be best managed by early surgery. Cerebral complications make the timing of cardiac surgery difficult. The safety of cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) surgery in stroke patients remains controversial. Stroke complicates the outcome of left-sided IE in 20-40% of cases and is associated with poor outcome. The risk of stroke in IE falls rapidly after the initiation of effective antimicrobial therapy. The risk of embolization is highest during the first week of therapy, and in patients with mobile vegetations or vegetations >10 mm in diameter occurring on the anterior mitral leaflet. Indications for valvular surgery are significant congestive heart failure or valvular
regurgitation
, myocardial abscess, persistent
bacteremia
and large-size vegetations with high risk of embolism. Decisions regarding surgical intervention in patients with IE should be individualized. In the absence of large prospective studies, optimal timing of surgery is still discussed when stroke complicates IE. A multidisciplinary assessment of the situation, involving cardiologists, cardiac surgeons, infectiologists and neurologists, is recommended. Estimating the risk of recurrence after a first embolic event and careful evaluation of the indication for valve replacement are essential steps in making the therapeutic decision. Surgery should be delayed if possible in the event of large cerebral infarction or ICH in order to prevent neurological deterioration. It has been suggested that valve replacement should be considered within the first 72 h if the patients with brain infarction have severe heart failure, otherwise after 4 weeks. Early surgery appears safe in patients presenting transient ischemic attacks or "silent" cerebral embolism.
...
PMID:Impact of stroke on therapeutic decision making in infective endocarditis. 1987 84
In this review of the gastrointestinal (GI) and hepatic manifestations of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), 180 articles from the English literature, found using a medline search from January 1965 to December 2010, were examined. Vasculitis may cause ulcerations, bleeding, stricture formation, and perforation from ischemia and infarction. Otherwise, GI symptoms, occurring in about 50% of patients, are usually mild. Esophageal dysmotility may result in heartburn,
regurgitation
, and dysphagia. Occasionally, pneumatosis cystoides intestinalis may develop, sometimes associated with benign pneumoperitoneum. Patients are prone to salmonella
bacteremia
, presenting more commonly with fever and abdominal pain than with diarrhea. Intestinal pseudoobstruction usually is found with active lupus serology, preferentially involving small rather than the large bowel. Protein-losing enteropathy, characterized by diarrhea, edema, and hypoalbuminemia, can be the initial presentation of SLE. Malabsorption with a prevalence of 9.5% is occasionally associated with celiac disease. Pancreatitis, with an annual incidence of 0.4 to 1/1000, has an overall mortality of 27% that is decreased with corticosteroid therapy. Acute and chronic ascites may be due to lupus peritonitis or to associated diseases, such as pancreatitis, nephrotic syndrome, heart failure, or infections. Abnormal liver function tests may be due to steatosis from lupus or from corticosteroid therapy. Only about 10% of patients with autoimmune hepatitis have lupus. Up to 4.7% of patients with SLE have chronic active hepatitis correlating strongly with the presence of antibody to ribosomal P protein. SLE can involve the entire GI tract and the liver. Treatment with corticosteroids, cytotoxic agents, and/or immunosuppressants is often successful.
...
PMID:Gastrointestinal and hepatic manifestations of systemic lupus erythematosus. 2142 47
The frequency of autopsies appears to be declining, and the usefulness has been challenged. We reviewed cases of autopsied active infective endocarditis (IE) during 2 periods based on the availability of high-tech 2-dimensional echocardiograms: Period 1 (P1) included 40 cases studied from 1970 to 1985, and Period 2 (P2) included 28 cases seen from 1986 to 2008--that is, before and after the introduction of echocardiograms in our institution. We conducted the study to reassess the pathology of IE and to determine how frequently diagnosis is not made during life.The age of patients increased 10 years on average between the 2 periods, and comorbidities were significantly more frequent in P2. While the frequency of rheumatic valve disease and prosthetic valve endocarditis (PVE) decreased, degenerative valve disease increased. Isolated mitral or aortic valve IE was most common. Right-sided IE was observed in patients with Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia from infected venous lines. In most cases IE involved only the cusps of cardiac valves. "Virulent" microorganisms caused ulcerations, rupture, and perforation of the cusps and necrosis of chordae tendiniae and perivalvular apparatus. In PVE the lesions were located behind the site of attachment, and vegetations were seen on the sewing ring in both metallic and biologic prostheses. Infection spread to adjacent structures and myocardium with ring abscess observed in 88% of cases. Prosthetic detachment causing valve
regurgitation
was associated with abscesses in 76% of cases; these patients developed persistent sepsis and severe cardiac failure. Obstruction occurred in patients with PVE of the mitral valve. Acute purulent pericarditis was observed in 22% of cases, mainly in patients with aortic valve IE and myocardial abscesses.Gross infarcts were seen in 63% of cases but were asymptomatic in most instances. The spleen, kidneys, and mesentery were the sites most frequently involved. Myocardial infarctions were found in less than 10% of cases. Abscesses were also frequently found and were a common source of persistent fever and
bacteremia
. Glomerulonephritis was more common in the first period. Brain pathology consisted of ischemic and hemorrhagic infarcts and abscesses. Cerebral bleeding was more frequent in patients with PVE on anticoagulant therapy. Neutrophilic meningitis was observed in S. aureus IE.Diagnosis of IE was not made during life in 14 (35%) cases during P1 and 12 (42.8%) cases in P2. Overall, diagnosis was missed until autopsy in 38.2% of cases. IE was hospital acquired in 28 instances. While a clinical diagnosis was made in all but 4 cases of early-onset PVE (23.5%), the diagnosis was not made during life in 22 of 51 patients with native-valve IE (43.1%). Of these 22 patients, IE was hospital acquired in 11 (50%). The absence of fever, cardiac murmurs, and many of the typical stigmata of endocarditis may have led to the diagnosis being overlooked clinically.Brain bleeding, cardiac failure and less frequently acute myocardial infarct were the most common causes of death.IE continues to be missed frequently until autopsy. Postmortem examination is an important tool for evaluating the quality of care, and for guiding teaching and research related to cardiovascular infections.
...
PMID:Infective endocarditis at autopsy: a review of pathologic manifestations and clinical correlates. 2254 28
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