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Query: UMLS:C0014118 (
endocarditis
)
15,629
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
While salmonellosis is often considered to affect primarily the gastrointestinal tract, infection at other sites may occur, producing characteristic clinical syndromes. We reviewed cases from our institutions and the literature on focal manifestations of salmonella infections. In the past, most extra-intestinal salmonella infections were caused by S. choleraesuis; however, we found S. typhimurium to be the predominant serotype. The mortality rate for patients in our series was considerably lower than the rate described for focal infections in other reviews. This may in part be due to lower proportion of infections due to S. choleraesuis, improved microbiologic and diagnostic techniques, increased use of ampicillin, and improved surgical techniques. Salmonella
endocarditis
usually occurs in patients with preexisting heart disease. Unlike other salmonella infections, S. choleraesuis is the most frequent serotype. Salmonella
endocarditis
is often very destructive, with a fatality rate of 70%. Nonvalvular (mural)
endocarditis
occurs in one-fourth of patients and survival has not been reported. While antibiotic therapy should be tried initially, if response is not prompt the clinician should look for an associated site of infection (intra- or extra-cardiac abscess), which will often require surgery. Salmonella pericarditis often presents with cardiac or pulmonary symptoms, but typical signs of pericardial disease (pulsus paradoxus, friction rub) or characteristic electrocardiographic changes (low voltage, elevated ST segments) are uncommon. Early diagnosis, before infection involves other areas of the heart, is crucial for survival. In addition to antibiotic therapy, pericardiocentesis or pericardiectomy is required. Salmonella may infect the peripheral or visceral arteries, but the abdominal aorta is the most frequent site of vascular infection. Most patients are men over age 50 with preexisting
atherosclerosis
of the aorta who do not have a previous history of gastroenteritis. About one-fourth of patients have associated lumbar osteomyelitis. No patients have been reported to survive with medical therapy alone. Specific guidelines for surgical removal of infected aneurysms have been proposed and these (in addition to increased use of ampicillin) may be responsible for higher survival rates in recent years. Due to the high incidence of relapses, postoperative blood cultures should be done routinely. Arterial infection should be considered in any elderly patient with salmonella bacteremia especially with prolonged fever or bacteremia after an "adequate course" of antibiotic therapy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Extra-intestinal manifestations of salmonella infections. 330 60
SLE is an inflammatory disease of unknown etiology with the potential of affecting virtually all organ systems. Cardiovascular involvement occurs frequently, although it is often mild enough not to cause clinical concern. Pericarditis is most commonly subclinical, noted only on echocardiogram. Pericardial fluid, which can accumulate rapidly enough to cause tamponade, is inflammatory in nature and can totally mimic infection. The occurrence of Libman-Sacks endocarditis, usually a pathological diagnosis of little clinical significance, has little if any correlation with the presence of audible murmurs. However, valve replacement is occasionally necessary secondary to sterile destruction. These valvular lesions can also embolize or become infected. The incidence of ischemic coronary disease is increased, both secondary to premature
atherosclerosis
and, rarely, coronary arteritis. Conduction disease and arrhythmias are infrequently reported in adult patients, but congenital CHB has been noted in children born to mothers who have circulating anti-Ro antibody. Evidence is accumulating that suggests there is a mild cardiomyopathy associated with SLE that may be due to thrombotic or inflammatory microvascular coronary disease. Acute clinical myocarditis also rarely occurs. Therapeutically, at present, a reasonable course would seem to be to limit all known possible contributing factors to premature coronary artery and myocardial disease (hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, smoking, steroid therapy, etc), to be vigilant about recognizing the rarer complications associated with SLE (infectious pericarditis and
endocarditis
, coronary arteritis, pericardial tamponade, clinical myocarditis), and to remember that these uncommon complications are indeed uncommon. The importance of vigorously treating systemic hypertension cannot be overstressed.
...
PMID:Cardiovascular involvement in systemic lupus erythematosus. 333 84
Prolapse of the aortic valve (PAV) was diagnosed in 20 patients using a method of two-dimensional echocardiography. PAV primary and secondary forms were distinguished. Congenital pathology of the other cardiac valves (prolapse of the atrioventricular valves and the bicuspid aortic valve) or the aorta was observed in primary PAV. Secondary PAV was observed as a concomitant pathology in dilatation of the aortic root resulting from
atherosclerosis
or in an infectious process on the aortic cusps in subacute septic
endocarditis
. Of non-invasive diagnostic methods the most effective one was two-dimensional echocardiography which could be regarded as a verifying method in PAV.
...
PMID:[Prolapse of the aortic valve]. 382 76
SLE affects most aspects of cardiac function, and recent studies have reported increasing cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. Pathologically, SLE is characterized by a pancarditis involving pericardium, myocardium, endocardium, and coronary arteries. In autopsy series, pericarditis has been found in 43% to 100% (mean 62%, Table I), and myocarditis was found in 8% to 78% (mean 40%, Table II), but both have been underdiagnosed clinically. Libman-Sacks lesions have been noted in 25% to 100% (mean 43%) and infective
endocarditis
in 1.1% to 4.9% of clinical and autopsy studies (Table III). Coronary disease may be due to arteritis, which should be treated with high-dose steroids, or it may be due to
atherosclerosis
, which is amenable to medical or surgical therapy. Valvular disease has been treated surgically, but with a combined surgical mortality as high as 25%. Aortic insufficiency and mitral regurgitation are the most common valvular problems, although aortic and mitral stenosis have also been reported. Hypertension has been noted in 14% to 69%, and heart failure in 5% to 44%. Evidence for a lupus cardiomyopathy, which may be subclinical, is reviewed. While steroids may ameliorate SLE pancarditis, they have also been associated with hypertension, LV hypertrophy, purulent and constrictive pericarditis, mitral regurgitation, and perhaps accelerated
atherosclerosis
. It remains to be seen if improved diagnosis and treatment of the cardiovascular manifestations of SLE can enhance survival.
...
PMID:Cardiovascular manifestations of systemic lupus erythematosus. 390 17
112 echocardiographies and 91 long-term Holter recordings were performed looking for an emboligenic cardiac lesion in patients in sinus rhythm and free of any major carotid
atherosclerosis
. The results were evaluated in relation to the emboligenic potential of the lesions observed. 5 positive results were obtained (4.46%) on echocardiography (3 aneurysms of the interatrial septum, 1 myxoma and 1
endocarditis
) and 10 positive results (10.99%) were demonstrated on the Holter monitor. Among the 45 (40.18%) echocardiographic anomalies capable of constituting a cardiac site of origin of emboli, there were 18 cases of dilatation or hypertrophy of the left chambers of the heart, 13 cases of calcification of the aortic valve, 8 cases of prolapse of the mitral valve and 8 cases of calcification of the mitral ring. Finally, 55.35 per cent of the echocardiographic examinations and 52.74 per cent of the Holter examinations were found to be normal. Although the yield of these examinations is low, the anomalies discovered were definitely responsible for the cerebral emboli and could only have been demonstrated by such investigations.
...
PMID:[Contribution of echocardiography and Holter monitoring to the diagnosis of occult sources of cerebral embolism]. 390 5
In this review, the cardiac lesions which develop in association with the various collagen-vascular diseases are described. In rheumatoid arthritis, the most frequent lesions are: fibrous obliterative pericarditis, with pericardial deposits of calcium, fibrin, cholesterol, and rheumatoid granulomas; granulomatous or nonspecific myocarditis; valvulitis, vasculitis, and amyloid deposits. In ankylosing spondylitis, the lesions involve mainly the valves (aortic and mitral valves) and the aorta. In systemic lupus erythematosus, the predominant cardiovascular lesions are: pericarditis, Libman-Sacks endocarditis, nonspecific myocarditis, vasculitis with fibrinoid necrosis, and acceleration of
atherosclerosis
. In scleroderma, the main cardiac lesion is fibrosis with only scanty inflammatory cells; pericarditis and nonbacterial thrombotic
endocarditis
also occur. In dermatomyositis/polymyositis, fibrous or fibrinous pericarditis can occur, as well as myocarditis with infiltrates of lymphocytes and plasma cells and with degeneration and necrosis of myocytes; valvulitis is uncommon except when the disease is related to mucinous adenocarcinoma. In polyarteritis nodosa, various stages of necrotizing vasculitis involve all layers of the arterial walls; foci of myocardial necrosis of various sizes can occur in association with these lesions; cardiac hypertrophy related to hypertension and pericarditis related to uremia, may also be found. In Wegener's granulomatosis, pericarditis, inflammatory infiltrates, necrotizing granulomas, and vasculitis have been observed in the heart.
...
PMID:Cardiovascular lesions in collagen-vascular diseases. 391 76
The pathology and clinical features of 258 cases of mitral ring calcification were reviewed. The overall incidence in patients over 50 years of age was 8.5%; it was more than twice as high in women (11.5%) as in men (4.5%) and rose sharply with age. Cardiac failure and systolic murmurs were each noted in over half the patients. Hypertension was slightly commoner than in age- and sex-matched groups without ring calcification, although the difference was not statistically significant. Small nodules of calcification were more frequent in men and heavy deposits in women. Distortion and atrial displacement of the posterior mitral cusp was present in 26% of the hearts with early ring calcification, in 56% of the hearts with moderate, and in almost all hearts with marked changes. Systolic murmurs had been heard in 73% of these cases. ;Caseation' of the calcified ring was seen in seven hearts and haemorrhagic valvulitis in three. Calcium had ulcerated through the cusp in 12 cases, with thrombotic and/or bacterial endocarditis in five. Aortic valve calcification was present in 36% of men and was quantitatively related to the severity of mitral ring calcification. In women the incidence was 30% and there was no corresponding quantitative relationship. Microscopy showed nonspecific chronic inflammatory changes adjacent to calcium in about half the cases in both sexes, with foreign body type giant cells in 6%. Similar inflammatory changes in the valve cusp were almost twice as common in women as in men. There was no evidence that previous
endocarditis
was responsible for mitral ring calcification, neither did parity influence its incidence. Severe coronary
atherosclerosis
was unrelated but severe aortic
atherosclerosis
was commoner in patients with calcified mitral rings. The difference, in women, was statistically significant. The higher incidence of severe degrees of ring calcification, complications, and valvular inflammation in women suggests a sex-determined difference in tissue response in the mitral area. Possible provoking factors apply to both sexes and both left side valves, and such a difference would account for the relative frequency and sex incidence of mitral ring calcification.
...
PMID:Pathological and clinical study of calcification of the mitral valve ring. 543 Apr 24
Neuropathologic examination of an autopsy series of 54 patients of various types of CVD revealed a very high frequency of pathologic changes both in brain parenchyma (in 81%) and vessels (in 78%). A broad but continuous spectrum of primary vascular alterations was observed, ranging from fibrinoid deposits in intact or necrotizing vessel walls to fibrohyalinosis and endothelial proliferations. In acute SLE showing LE cells within brain tissues, immune complex deposits were observed for the first time in brain vessels, in addition to similar deposits in the plexus chorioideus and in hematoxylin bodies. Secondary complications are frequently affecting the brain in CVD; they are mainly sequels of systemic
atherosclerosis
, hypertension, thromboemboli from SLE
endocarditis
, cardiac, hepatic or renal dysfunctions, or infections and should be clinically differentiated from primary brain involvement in CVD to ensure the appropriate therapeutic measures.
...
PMID:Brain pathology in the collagen vascular diseases. 611 36
Clinicopathologic correlations of nonbacterial thrombotic
endocarditis
(NBTE) were studied with special reference to their pathogenetic role in cerebral and myocardial infarction. In 2340 cases of consecutive autopsies of the aged, NBTE was observed in 217 cases or 9.3%. The age distribution of NBTE revealed a gradual increase with advancing age. The underlying diseases of NBTE were malignant neoplasm (51.6%), infection (28.3%) and other diseases (20.1%). The incidence of NBTE in each cancer was high in cancers of the colon (16.2%), pancreas (15.2%), gall bladder or bile duct (14.1%) and lung (13.0%). The vegetations of NBTE were found on the aortic valve in 46.1%, on the mitral valve in 40.6% and on the both valves in 8.3%. The incidence of myocardial infarction and scar was 51.2% in the NBTE group, while it was 38.6% in the non-NBTE control group (p less than 0.02). This difference was marked in patients with a small infarction (10.6% vs. 5.3%) and a myocardial scar (30.4% vs. 19.0%). The grade of coronary stenosis was less in the NBTE group than in the control group (p less than 0.001), suggesting that the origin of the myocardial ischemic lesion was embolism from NBTE. The incidence of large cerebral infarction was 14.7% in NBTE and 9.2% in the control group, and that of medium sized cerebral infarction was 35.0% and 23.6% respectively. In this latter group, cortical infarction comprised 57.9% in the NBTE group and 26.6% in the control group. In large cerebral infarction, cerebral
atherosclerosis
was less severe in NBTE than in the control group (p less than 0.001), also suggesting an embolic mechanism. Disseminated intravascular coagulation was found in 41.9% of NBTE.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Nonbacterial thrombotic endocarditis as a cause of cerebral and myocardial infarction. 648 38
After reviewing the physiopathology, the authors report the principal features of infectious arterial disease observed in a department of infectious diseases. Excluding iatrogenic arteritis, particularly after vascular surgery, and some vasculitis in which an infectious agent may play a role, only the classical but now rare causes are described: rickettsial disease, syphilis and typhoid. The most commonly observed problem at present is infectious aneurysms: primary aneurysms secondary to
atherosclerosis
in which salmonella is by far the predominant organism, before the staphylococci and streptococci. The most serious complication is the major risk of rupture which may be the presenting event. Secondary aneurysms are essentially those of
endocarditis
. The mechanism is not fully understood and they occur at different stages of the course of the disease. The main problem associated with these aneurysms is their multiplicity and localisation; the intracranial forms are the most common and most serious in the experience of the authors, with their difficulties of diagnosis and treatment: extracranial aneurysms are usually located in the main limb arteries. Adjacent secondary aneurysms are exceptionally rare. Tuberculous and viral causes of aneurysm are among the rarest etiologies discussed.
...
PMID:[Infectious arteriopathies]. 665 Oct 69
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