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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Infective endocarditis is an uncommon manifestation of group B streptococcal disease. Seven cases of group B streptococcal
endocarditis
are reported herein. Another fifty-five cases published in the literature since 1962 are reviewed: the male to female ratio was 1.4:1. The average age was 53.8 years, and 45% of patients were 60 years of age or older. Two cases of nonsocomial
endocarditis
and two cases of polymicrobial
endocarditis
were identified. There were five cases of prosthetic valve
endocarditis
. Mitral and aortic valvular involvement were present in 48% and 29% of cases, respectively. Underlying heart disease was found in more than half of the cases. Rheumatic heart disease was the commonest underlying cardiac condition. Noncardiac underlying conditions included
diabetes mellitus
, alcoholism, pregnancy, intravenous drug abuse, and genitourinary disease. Onset was varied as was initial presentation of the disease. Large arterial thrombi were common. Overall mortality was 43.5%. Penicillin is the treatment of choice for group B streptococcal
endocarditis
. However, based on in vitro and in vivo studies as well as case reports, some authors feel that the combination of penicillin and an aminoglycoside is a superior regimen. Cephalothin or vancomycin are alternatives for patients who are allergic to penicillin.
...
PMID:Group B streptococcal endocarditis: report of seven cases and review of the literature, 1962-1985. 351 20
With the increase of pacemaker and central venous catheter implantation the number of intracardiac infections now constitutes a significant problem. Twenty patients between 22 and 77 years of age admitted for intracardial infected pacemaker probes or central venous catheter remnants presented with recurring attacks of endocarditic fever; in one case multiple pulmonary abscesses resulted from septic embolization. Staphylococci were the most frequently involved organism (75%). Risk factors leading to intracardiac infection were local reoperations and
diabetes mellitus
. Removal of the foreign body was achieved by cardiotomy in all cases. Twelve patients were operated upon without the use of the heart-lung machine, but extracorporeal circulation was necessary in 8 patients. There was one fatality in each of the 2 techniques, for a total mortality rate of 10%. In all cases the foreign bodies were removed without intracardial damage and the
endocarditis
was cured. When attempts at external extraction fail, the foreign body should be removed by either open or closed cardiotomy. This limits the danger of injury to the heart and of embolization of septic or thrombotic material. The use of the heart-lung machine is especially indicated in the presence of widespread, firm adhesions, or large bacterial vegetations and thrombi.
...
PMID:[Surgical therapy of intracardiac infected pacemaker electrodes and catheter remnants]. 370 86
In a retrospective study the reports of 211 cases of cardiogenic cerebral embolism--diagnosed on the base of neurological and cardiological findings--were analyzed in view of signs and findings of prognostic value. There were 21 patients with TIA, 39 cases of RIND and 151 patients with cerebral infarction, 60 of which showed mild and 91 severe neurological symptoms. 38 patients died during the period of hospitalization. While sex of the patients as well as vascular risk factors (hypertension,
diabetes mellitus
, cigarette smoking) did not influence the clinical course of the disease, patients with TIA or RIND in general were younger (about 5 years) than those with severe stroke. Prognosis of cardiogenic cerebral embolism depended to a great degree on the underlying heart disease. Cerebral embolism after myocardial infarction showed a better remission of symptoms than embolism in atrial fibrillation. In the group of valvular diseases the course of embolic strokes in mitral lesions was worse than in aortal valve disease. Prognosis was worst in
endocarditis
, both in view of neurological deficit and of mortality. Mostly, the cardiogenic emboli lead to infarctions of the middle cerebral artery territory (78 per cent) with a predilection for the left hemisphere. In media-syndromes the clinical course was significantly worse in patients with additional homonymous visual defect compared to incomplete infarctions. Initial disturbance of conscience reduced prognosis quoad vitam et restitutionem significantly. Of the neuroradiological findings, the detection of arterial occlusion or circulatory disturbance in angiography as well as the finding of an ischemic lesion in computed axial tomography (CAT) was correlated with a severe course of the embolic stroke. While 7 patients with hemorrhagic infarction in CAT-Scan showed no differences in the clinical course, the 14 patients with pathological cerebral spinal fluid findings in embolism had an unfavourable prognosis. The development of epileptic seizures did not influence the further course of the infarction to a significant extent. Results are compared with the current world literature.
...
PMID:[Prognosis of cardiogenic cerebral embolism]. 374 66
In an effort to ascertain important epidemiologic and prognostic risk factors, we analyzed 33 cases of Staphylococcus aureus meningitis occurring over an 8-year period (1976 to 1984). Staphylococcus aureus caused 6% of all bacterial meningitis at our University Hospital. Fifty percent of cases were pediatric and included 7 newborn infants, of whom 71% were either premature or had low birth weight. Major underlying diseases were: central nervous system (CNS) disorders (55%),
endocarditis
(21%, predominantly intravenous drug abusers), other sites of infection (27%), and prematurity (24%). Fifty-seven percent of patients were bacteremic and 41% of those had concomitant bacteriuria. Hypoglycorrhachia was present in 27% of cases, positive cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) Gram stain in 20%, disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) in 19%, and methicillin-resistant organisms in 18%. Cerebrospinal fluid cultures remained positive for a protracted period (mean, 6.7 days) regardless of the presence or absence of a CNS shunt. Overall mortality was 21%. Favorable outcomes were associated with the eventual presence of sterile CSF (15.4% vs. 100% mortality) and the removal of foreign bodies (10% vs. 67% mortality). Mortality was also associated (p less than 0.5) with the presence of
diabetes mellitus
, age greater than 60, obtundation or coma on presentation, bacteremia, or DIC. Cure correlated (p less than .05) with CNS shunt-associated infections, age less than 1, normal neurologic examinations on presentation, or the absence of DIC or bacteremia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Staphylococcus aureus meningitis: a broad-based epidemiologic study. 382 85
Risk factors for severe bacterial infections, that is, deep sternal wound infection, pneumonia, septicemia, and prosthetic valve
endocarditis
, were evaluated in 246 consecutive patients undergoing valve replacement (N = 84) or aortocoronary bypass operation (N = 162). Multiple logistic regression analysis was applied to determine the ability of putative risk factors to predict infection. The risk factors considered were age, sex,
diabetes mellitus
, duration of cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB), duration of operation, amount of blood restored on the day of operation, repeat thoracotomy for bleeding, intraaortic balloon pumping, reoperation, emergency operation, and the professional status of the surgeon. Severe infections occurred in similar frequency after valve replacement (8/84; 9.5%) and aortocoronary bypass (11/162; 6.8%). For patients who had a bypass procedure, repeat thoracotomy was the only factor significantly associated with infection (p = 0.0004). However, the classification analysis revealed that this variable alone is too unspecific for a reliable prediction. Univariate analysis indicated that restoration of more than 2,500 ml of blood (p = 0.0001), reoperation (p = 0.0821), duration of operation (p = 0.0061), duration of CPB (p = 0.0318), and intraaortic balloon pumping (p = 0.0281) were associated with infection following valve replacement. A model with three variables emerged from the multiple logistic regression: after correction for blood restoration, reoperation, and duration of CPB, no other variable was of additional predictive value. For patients who underwent valve replacement, the model performed well in predicting complications. The classification analysis revealed a high correspondence between observed and predicted instances of infection: it correctly predicted 75% of the patients with infection and 96% of those without infection.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Risk factors for severe bacterial infections after valve replacement and aortocoronary bypass operations: analysis of 246 cases by logistic regression. 387 84
Group B streptococcal bacteremia outside the perinatal setting is not commonly emphasized. This report reviews all episodes of group B streptococcal bacteremia during a four and a half year period in a large community teaching hospital. Fourteen episodes occurred in neonates, four in parturient women, and 28 in other adults. Bacteremic adults were usually elderly with an average age of 68 years. Group B streptococcal bacteremia occurred in adults with various underlying diseases, including
diabetes mellitus
, liver disease, peripheral vascular disease, and hematologic disease, and in those receiving long-term steroid therapy. Infections causing group B streptococcal bacteremia in adults included decubitus ulcers, pneumonia,
endocarditis
, cellulitis, arthritis, osteomyelitis, and meningitis. Thirteen of 28 episodes of group B streptococcal bacteremia in adults were hospital-acquired. Overall mortality in adults was 70 percent. Group B streptococcal bacteremia in adults outside of the perinatal setting is associated with significant underlying diseases and has a high mortality.
...
PMID:Group B streptococcal bacteremia in a community teaching hospital. 388 11
The group G streptococcus has surfaced in the past 10 to 15 years as an important opportunistic and nosocomial pathogen. Although more precise organism recognition accounts for a portion of these cases, there can be little doubt that the group G streptococcus has become a more prevalent pathogen. Commercial kits, utilizing staphylococcal coagglutination or latex agglutination, are now available, affording all clinical laboratories the opportunity to identify this organism easily. Published reviews encompassing the experiences of a single institution or even several institutions affiliated with a single medical center, particularly as they were influenced by referral patterns, did not reflect the broad scope of infections that we discovered by extending our survey into the community, beyond the medical center complex and its immediate affiliated hospitals. Although malignancy is the single most obvious background factor, alcoholism and
diabetes
are also important host determinants of infection. Skin and soft-tissue infections (and surface sources of infection) are equally important among patients with or without the element of malignancy. Polymicrobial infection, including polymicrobial bacteremia, is an important feature, with S. aureus infections accounting for most of these cases, relating to the skin and soft tissue sources of infections so commonly seen. We saw a panorama of problems including
endocarditis
, septic arthritis, pleuropulmonary infections, bone and joint infections, puerperal sepsis and neonatal infection, peritonitis and ophthalmitis; we also saw a significant number of patients with bacteremia and no apparent primary source of infection. Response to antibiotic therapy was dictated by the nature of the underlying diseases, and individuals without a background of malignant disease did well, particularly those with skin and soft-tissue infections. While the literature suggests that patients with
endocarditis
and septic arthritis due to this organism respond poorly to antibiotic therapy, implying that such failures relate to in vitro antibiotic phenomena, we preferred to examine the problem from the viewpoint of the host(s) involved. Subacute endocarditis and acute endocarditis due to the group G streptococcus may be clinically separable, and thus require separate therapeutic approaches. In patients with septic arthritis, prosthetic devices, prior joint disease and immunosuppressive diseases and therapy often adversely influence the response to antibiotic therapy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Infections due to Lancefield group G streptococci. 397 42
Staphylococcus aureus is a ubiquitous organism that is normally carried on the skin and body surfaces of man. The nares are sites frequently colonized, and patients and hospital personnel represent the major source of infection. The occurrence of staphylococcal infection depends on the availability of staphylococci and the host resistance to infection. Factors that influence the carrier rate of S. aureus include minimal colonizing dose, effects of antimicrobial therapy, disinfectants in the environment, coincidental respiratory infections, possible effect of immune factors, duration of hospital stay, and regular needle injections. Certain patients such as drug abusers, patients with
diabetes
, and patients with chronic renal failure are at high risk of S. aureus infections. although underlying immune deficiencies are present, increased carrier rate also might be related to regular needle use, as shown among allergy patients. The significance of carrier state has been defined in outbreaks in hospital nurseries, postoperative patients, and systemic infections such as
endocarditis
in the drug abuser, the toxic shock syndrome, and dermatologic infections.
...
PMID:Skin and skin structure infections in the patient at risk: carrier state of Staphylococcus aureus. 637 66
The Transplant Service at the University of Minnesota Hospitals has performed over 2,000 kidney transplants. Fourteen of these patients have developed cardiac conditions necessitating surgical intervention at intervals of 9 to 144 months (mean 67 months) following their transplantation. These individuals had a mean age of 42 years, and five (36%) were diabetic. All patients had functioning renal allografts with preoperative serum creatinine levels ranging from 1.0 to 1.8 mg/100 ml (mean 1.4 mg/100 ml). Ten patients underwent aorta-coronary saphenous vein bypass grafting. One patient underwent bypass grafting and concomitant left ventricular aneurysmectomy. Native valvular
endocarditis
developed in two patients. One had tricuspid valve debridement for fungal
endocarditis
and the other had aortic valve replacement for bacterial endocarditis. The final patient had calcific aortic stenosis and coronary artery disease necessitating aortic valve replacement and coronary bypass. Two patients (14%) died perioperatively. One was a young woman with juvenile-onset
diabetes
and preinfarction angina who died suddenly several days after the operation; at autopsy, she was found to have an occluded graft to the right coronary artery and extensive infarction. The other was a 54-year-old woman with calcific aortic stenosis, coronary artery disease, and unstable angina who died perioperatively of uncontrollable arrhythmias. Autopsy suggested that she may have had an unsuspected infarction 1 to 2 days before the operation. The remaining 12 patients had uneventful postoperative courses and returned to Class I functional status from a cardiac standpoint. There has been one late death (7%), 45 months after successful coronary artery bypass grafting, as a result of complications attendant to a perforated gastric ulcer. The remaining 11 patients are alive and well at intervals of 8 to 93 months (mean 31 months) after operation. Postoperative serum creatinine levels at hospital discharge averaged 1.6 mg/100 ml, not significantly changed from preoperative levels. Cardiac operations can be performed safely in patients with functioning renal allografts. Patient survival is acceptable and preservation of renal function has been uniformly successful in surviving patients.
...
PMID:Cardiac operations in patients with functioning renal allografts. 638 68
We describe a 62-year-old man with
diabetes mellitus
and peripheral vascular insufficiency, with an ulcer on his foot which led to staphylococcal septicemia,
endocarditis
, and disseminated intravascular coagulation. All these factors contributed to thromboembolic occlusion of the terminal arteries and veins supplying the stomach, causing gastric infarction.
...
PMID:Gastric infarction: a complication of endocarditis due to Staphylococcus aureus. 685 89
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