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Query: UMLS:C0014118 (endocarditis)
15,629 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Congestive heart failure following infective endocarditis in hemodialysis patients has been uniformly fatal in patients treated with antibiotics alone. Thirteen patients on chronic hemodialysis have undergone replacement of the infected valve with an overall survival of 61%. The aortic valve was involved in 10 patients and Staphylococcus aureus the responsible organism in nine. Recurrent bacteremia occurred in two of the eight long-term survivors and was successfully treated with antibiotics in one patient and replacement of the prosthesis in the other. The surgical treatment of infective endocarditis in the hemodialysis patient is an acceptable mode of therapy and its application should not be hindered by reservations concerning operative feasibility or postoperative longevity. As in non-dialysis patients with infective endocarditis and congestive heart failure early operative intervention may substantially improve survival.
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PMID:Surgical treatment of infective endocarditis in hemodialysis patients. 63 Jul 44

Counterimmunoelectrophoresis (CIE) was utilized to determine antistaphylococcal precipitin antibody titers in patients with various staphylococcal diseases and in control subjects. Patients with staphylococcal disease comprised five cases of endocarditis, 22 of deep tissue infection (including seven cases of osteomyelitis), six of bacteremia and six of skin infection. Control subjects consisted of 31 patients with nonstaphylococcal bacteremias, 29 hospitalized patients without infection and 30 healthy subjects. Antistaphylococcal antibodies were present in all patients with staphylococcal endocarditis and deep tissue staphylococcal infection, and all but three had titers greater than or equal to 1:4. No significant difference in titers was found between these two groups of patients. Antibodies, although present in some patients in the other categories, were detected less frequently; only two patients had titers greater than or equal to 1:4. Thus, an antistaphylococcal antibody titer by CIE of 1:4 or greater may be an additional diagnostic parameter helpful in distinguishing patients with staphylococcal endocarditis or deep tissue infection from those with other forms of staphylococcal infection and from noninfected subjects.
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PMID:Correlation of antistaphylococcal antibody titers with severity of staphylococcal disease. 64 29

Twenty-six adults with Streptococcus bovis endocarditis and ten with bacteremia alone were studied to determine possible portals of entry. Of 36 patients (17 with endocarditis, eight with bacteremia alone), 25 had gastrointestinal lesions or manipulation. In 22, the gastrointestinal tract appeared to be the source of S bovis bacteremia. Four patients had either carcinoma of the colon (two) or potentially malignant villous adenomas (two) when first seen because of S bovis bacteremia. None of these, nor two other patients with benign colonic polyps, had bowel-related symptoms or signs prior to admission. Since S bovis is a normal intestinal tract inhabitant, bacteremia may frequently be associated with bowel lesions. Streptococcus bovis bacteremia may provide an early clue to the presence of serious and clinically unexpected gastrointestinal disease. Gastrointestinal tract evaluation should be part of S bovis bacteremia patient management, with or without endocarditis.
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PMID:Streptococcus bovis bacteremia and underlying gastrointestinal disease. 66 68

The relationship between Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia and bacteriuria was studied over a five year period in three hospitals. In a Veterans Administration Hospital, 59 patients with Staph, aureus bacteremia had a urine culture within 48 hours of a positive blood culture. In 16 of 59 (27 per cent), greater than 10(5) Staph. aureus was recovered from the urine in pure culture. Six of these patients had apparent primary staphylococcal urinary tract infection. Clinical and laboratory parameters in the patients with staphylococcal bacteremia and bacteriuria were compared with those in 31 patients with staphylococcal bacteremia and sterile urine cultures. The two groups differed only in the more frequent occurrence of pyuria and proteinuria in the bacteriuric patients. In two other hospitals, staphylococcal bacteriuria occurred in 7 per cent of patients with Staph. aureus bacteremia and in 13 per cent of cases of staphylococcal endocarditis. Review of autopsy records for 33 patients who died within one month of their bacteremia failed to show a correlation between bacteriuria and the presence of renal abscess. Staphylococcal bacteriuria is a frequent and unexplained concomitant of Staph. aureus bactremia.
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PMID:The association between Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia and bacteriuria. 68 15

We treated five patients with persistent Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia and endocarditis. Surgical intervention or a "second-line" antistaphylococcal agent was required for bacteriologic cure in each. Special bacteriologic evaluation failed to demonstrate methicillin resistance or antibiotic "tolerance" among the strains of Staphylococcus tested. Cephalosporin agents were noted to be more susceptible to inoculum effect than either methicillin or nafcillin. All patients survived; the explanation for their atypical course is obscure. We present an approach to patients with persistent Staph. aureus bacteremia and endocarditis.
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PMID:Persistent bacteremia in staphylococcal endocarditis. 70 32

During a 12-month period, 23 patients aged 12 to 78 years were treated for 8 to 40 days (mean, 23 days) at home with intravenous (i.v.) antibiotics. Diseases treated included bone and joint infection (14 patients), blastomycosis (two), actinomycosis (two), staphylococcal bacteremia (two), endocarditis (two), and candidal pyelonephritis (one). After initial in-hospital training, patients self-administered their drugs through a heparin-lock i.v. cannula, which was changed regularly by a visiting home care nurse. Antibiotics administered included cloxacillin, penicillin G, cephalosporins, gentamicin, carbenicillin, and amphotericin B. Patient and family acceptance of the program was good, the program was therapeutically effective, and, apart from a decreased prevalence of phlebitis with the heparin lock at home, side effects were no different from those of in-hospital-treated patients. The cost of home therapy was $ 40 per patient-day compared with an estimated $ 137 had the patients remained in hospital. Most patients were able to resume normal activities while receiving home i.v. therapy.
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PMID:Intravenous antibiotic therapy at home. 71 41

Experience with Staphylococcus aureus infections in a hemodialysis unit in which arteriovenous fistulas were used routinely for dialysis is reviewed, including an epidemic involving multiple bacteriophage types. Most infections involved the fistula site and were associated with bacteremia, although bacteremia without an obvious fistula infection did occur. Despite recurrent bacteremia, endocarditis was not documented, and patients did not develop teichoic acid antibodies as measured by an immunodiffusion technique. Patients with fistula infections responded to antibiotic therapy and did not require removal of the fistula except in two patients whose fistulas ruptured. Patients with shunt infections had to have their shunts removed to control infection. The epidemic developed after the hemodialysis unit was moved into a larger area to facilitate an increasing number of patients and after diabetic patients were admitted to the dialysis program. Both autoinfection and cross-infection contributed to the epidemic, which resolved with improvements in aseptic techniques. A culture survey indicated that the nasal carriage of staphylococci was not unusually high during the epidemic. This report emphasizes that staphylococcal infections remain a problem in continually changing hospital environments.
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PMID:Staphylococcal infections in a hemodialysis unit. 72 18

The relative efficacy of single doses of antibiotics in modifying the development of Bacteroides fragilis subsp. fragilis endocarditis was studied in an experimental model. Antibiotics were administered 0.5 h before intravenous injection of B. fragilis subsp. fragilis into rabbits prepared by insertion of a polyethylene catheter into the left side of the heart; 48 h later, intracardiac vegetations were excised and cultured anaerobically. B. fragilis was recovered from 92% of untreated animals. After a single dose of procaine penicillin G (250 mg/kg intramuscularly), 80% of the animals remained infected. Chloramphenicol (30 mg/kg), carbenicillin (50 mg/kg), and metronidazole (10 mg/kg) were also ineffective (76, 80, and 75% infected, respectively). Cefamandole (30 mg/kg), cefoxitin (30 mg/kg), and erythromycin (30 mg/kg) were significantly more active (50, 55, and 45% infected, respectively), as were higher doses of carbenicillin. Clindamycin (50 mg/kg) was the most effective regimen (11% infected). At present, the relevance of these results to the therapy of serious B. fragilis infections is not known, but this model may prove useful in the evaluation of the prevention of B. fragilis subsp. fragilis bacteremia.
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PMID:Effect of antibiotics on the prevention of experimental Bacteroides fragilis endocarditis. 72 64

The postmortem finding of acute right-sided bacterial endocarditis in a burn patient monitored with an indwelling pulmonary artery (Swan-Ganz) catheter for 14 days prompted a review of burn autopsies in which the catheter had been used. Autopsies of six consecutive burn patients monitored with a pulmonary artery catheter and who then died showed septic or aseptic endocarditis. In two of the six patients, right-sided staphylococcal endocarditis was the anatomic cause of death. In the remaining four, the lesions were aseptic thrombotic vegetations involving primarily the right atrium, tricuspid valve, right ventricle, and pulmonic valve. Several factors in the severely burned patient would favor endocarditis where a foreign object impacts on the heart valves. These include intermittent bacteremia, hypercoagulability, hyperdynamic cardiovascular function, and the use of antibiotics resulting in resistant strains. While an indwelling pulmonary artery catheter can provide useful monitoring information, it is sometimes responsible for serious complications in burned or septic patients.
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PMID:Endocarditis with the indwelling balloon-tipped pulmonary artery catheter in burn patients. 73 56

Staphylococcus aureus is a frequent cause of endocarditis as well as bacteremia arising from noncardiac sites. Differentiation of endocardial from nonendocardial S. aureus bacteremia is often difficult, especially in febrile patients with S. aureus sepsis and no indentifiable focus. A number of clinical and laboratory features help distinguish these two bacteremias.
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PMID:Staphylococcal bacteremia: distinguishing endocarditis. 76 Apr 24


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