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

Bacterium-platelet interactions at the cardiac valve surface represent an important initial step in the induction of infective endocarditis (IE). This cell-cell interaction may play either a protagonistic role in the induction of IE via bacterial adherence to and aggregation of platelets or an antagonistic role via secretion of platelet-derived microbicidal molecules. We examined the spectrum and interrelationship of three aspects of the interaction of 20 clinical Staphylococcus aureus isolates with rabbit platelets in vitro: (i) S. aureus adherence to platelets; (ii) S. aureus-induced platelet aggregation; and (iii) S. aureus resistance to the action of thrombin-induced platelet microbicidal protein (PMP; low-molecular-weight cationic peptides contained in alpha granules). Among the 20 S. aureus isolates (11 bacteremia, 9 endocarditis), there was a heterogeneous distribution profile for each of the bacterium-platelet interaction parameters studied. For S. aureus-platelet adherence and S. aureus-induced platelet aggregation, 3 of 20 and 7 of 20 isolates tested were considered highly active for each respective parameter; 5 of 20 staphylococcal strains were deemed resistant to the bactericidal action of PMP. In addition, more endocarditis isolates (45%) were PMP resistant than strains from patients without endocarditis (19%). When analyzed concomitantly, there was a significant, positive correlation between S. aureus-platelet adherence and S. aureus-induced platelet aggregation among isolates (P = 0.003; r = 0.78). In contrast, there were no statistically significant relationships between either platelet adherence or aggregation and PMP resistance among these 20 S. aureus isolates. These data suggest that platelet adherence and aggregation are related abilities of S. aureus, while resistance to thrombin-induced PMP is an independent phenotypic characteristic and potential virulence factor.
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PMID:Staphylococcus aureus susceptibility to thrombin-induced platelet microbicidal protein is independent of platelet adherence and aggregation in vitro. 158 3

Pneumococcal endocarditis characteristically presents as an acute illness, often accompanied by purulent meningitis, rapid destruction of the heart valves, congestive heart failure, and high mortality. We describe two patients with subacute pneumococcal endocarditis without a known primary source of pneumococcal bacteremia, fever, meningitis, or congestive heart failure. Both patients were cured with medical therapy. Pneumococcal endocarditis can present as an indolent illness resembling viridans streptococcal endocarditis.
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PMID:Subacute bacterial endocarditis secondary to Streptococcus pneumoniae. 821 83

Of 92 consecutive patients treated for proven native valve endocarditis three had ulcerative colitis and 2 Crohn's disease. All 5 patients developed severe complications; three had to undergo emergency valve replacement. With a prevalence of 64.1/10(5) cases of inflammatory bowel disease the calculated incidence (5/92) revealed a significant over-representation of inflammatory bowel disease among patients with proven endocarditis (p less than 5.08 x 10(-9)). Possible explanations may be the suppression of cellular immune defense by therapeutic interventions, high frequency of bacteremia caused by increased permeability of the damaged mucosa for bacteria and a higher incidence of diagnostic and therapeutic interventions in this patient population. Therefore, prophylaxis for bacterial endocarditis should be carefully considered before expected bacteremias in patients with highly active inflammatory bowel disease even in the absence of cardiac factors predisposing to bacterial endocarditis.
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PMID:[An increased incidence of bacterial endocarditis in chronic inflammatory bowel diseases]. 163 71

A commercially available agar gel diffusion (AGD) assay was used to investigate the teichoic acid antibody (TAA) response in 183 patients with proven Staphylococcus aureus (SA) infections. Two control groups were also investigated. One consisted of 100 hospitalized patients with a variety of medical and surgical conditions other than SA infection and the other consisted of 116 healthy hospital staff members. The sensitivity of the AGD assay varied markedly depending on the site of infection in the patients with proven SA infections. All patients with SA endocarditis developed positive TAA titres (greater than or equal to 1:4), although more than one third of these were initially negative. In patients with chronic osteomyelitis or septic arthritis, 41% had positive TAA titres, whereas no positive titres were detected in patients with acute osteomyelitis or septic arthritis. Lower rates of positive TAA titres were found in patients with deep abscesses (27%), pneumonia (14%) and post-operative infections (9%), but no positive titres occurred in patients with acute uncomplicated bacteremia, cellulitis or meningitis. In 100 hospitalized control patients, no positive titres were detected, and only 1 of 116 (0.9%) healthy hospital staff controls was positive. Suggested guidelines for the use of the AGD assay are discussed.
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PMID:Detection of teichoic acid antibodies in Staphylococcus aureus infections. 164 Dec 54

Endovascular infections that involve the right side of the heart present their own unique etiologies, pathophysiologies, clinical manifestations, and therapeutic issues. The pathology of the vegetations of right-sided endocarditis is identical to that of left-sided endocarditis. These vegetations are irregular, friable masses of varying size the contain platelets, fibrin, RBCs, and microorganisms. These lesions serve as a nidus for deep-seated infection and produce sustained bacteremia. Right-sided endocarditis occurs in 5% to 10% of all cases of endocarditis. The most common predisposing factors are IV drug abuse and congenital heart disease. S. aureus is the most common pathogen. The clinical manifestations include fever, chills, rigor, dyspnea, pleuritic pain, productive cough, and hemoptysis. The cardiac manifestations can be notably absent early in the course of the disease, with only 20% of patients initially showing a significant murmur on physical examination. Peripheral embolic lesions can be seen. Echocardiography is helpful in identifying vegetations on the tricuspid valve in a significant proportion of patients. The chest radiograph is characteristic, showing features typical of multiple septic pulmonary emboli. The radiograph shows multiple, small, fuzzy, patchy, peripherally located densities that can change rapidly on serial films. Complications of right-sided endocarditis include pulmonary infarction, pulmonary abscess, progressive right-sided heart failure, and renal abnormalities. The treatment of right-sided endocarditis includes prolonged therapy, with high doses of IV bactericidal antibiotics. Four weeks of antibiotic therapy is generally required, but newer regimens using combination antibiotic therapy can be successful in sensitive strains of viridans group streptococci and S. aureus. Surgical resection of the tricuspid valve is recommended for organisms that do not respond to initial antibiotic therapy, fungal endocarditis, resistant relapsing organisms, or coexistent infection with S. aureus and P. aeruginosa. The prognosis of right-sided endocarditis is generally favorable when compared with left-sided endocarditis. The prognosis is especially favorable in IV drug abusers infected with S. aureus. Patients infected with fungal organisms, Pseudomonas or Serratia, have a worse prognosis. The presence of significant right-sided heart failure also imparts a worse prognosis.
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PMID:Endovascular infections arising from right-sided heart structures. 173 55

Enterococci frequently cause endocarditis and are the most common gram-positive isolates in polymicrobial bacteremia. We report three cases of polymicrobial endovascular infections at a single institution during a 12-month period; the enterococcal isolates were highly resistant to penicillins. These cases comprised 18% of all enterococcal endovascular isolates during the same 12-month period. Previous use of antibiotics, presence of endovascular catheters, and nosocomial acquisition of the organism occurred in all three cases. Clinicians should be aware of enterococcal resistance to penicillins and should exercise care in designing appropriate regimens for serious enterococcal infections.
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PMID:Endovascular infections caused by enterococci highly resistant to ampicillin. 174 72

During a six-year period five patients with Campylobacter fetus subspecies fetus infections were seen at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota. Bacteremia was observed in two patients, one presenting with aortic valve endocarditis and the other with abdominal atherosclerotic aortic aneurysm. C. fetus subsp. fetus was isolated from tibial tissue of a patient with osteomyelitis. Diarrhea was the main complaint of two further patients, and was also mentioned by the patient with the aortic aneurysm. Despite the use of incubation conditions and selective media geared to detect only Campylobacter jejuni, C. fetus subsp. fetus was isolated from stool specimens of the two patients with gastrointestinal symptoms. The fact that three of five C. fetus subsp. fetus infections observed in this study were associated with intestinal symptoms further supports the importance of the gastrointestinal tract in the pathogenesis of C. fetus subsp. fetus infections.
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PMID:Campylobacter fetus subspecies fetus infection. 176 87

We describe 10 new cases of bacteremia due to Stomatococcus mucilaginosus and review eight other cases that have been described in the literature. The most common clinical presentations were endocarditis, catheter-related infection, and septicemia. Commonly associated risk factors were intravenous drug abuse, cardiac valve disease, the presence of foreign bodies (especially indwelling vascular catheters), and immunocompromised states. S. mucilaginosus bacteremia is readily treatable with antibiotics. This organism is of low virulence, but appears to be an emerging pathogen. Infection due to S. mucilaginosus is likely to be underreported because the organism may be easily misidentified and information on it is not included in the databases of many automated microbiologic identification systems.
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PMID:Infections due to Stomatococcus mucilaginosus: 10 cases and review. 177 36

There have been numerous reports on resistance of anaerobic bacteria against antimicrobial agents. Therefore, to assess the situation in Zurich, 187 anaerobic strains of various bacterial genera, isolated from clinical specimens during winter 1990/91, were tested for their susceptibility to antimicrobial agents active against anaerobic bacteria. Besides the Bacteroides fragilis group, which is naturally resistant against penicillin, 30% of isolates of other Bacteroides species were also resistant against penicillin. In general, anaerobes have remained susceptible to cefoxitin, chloramphenicol, clindamycin, imipenem, the 5-nitroimidazoles (metronidazole, ornidazole) as well as combinations of beta-lactam antibiotics with beta-lactamase inhibitors (clavulanic acid, sulbactam and tazobactam). Because rare strains resistant against cefoxitin, clindamycin and beta-lactams plus beta-lactamase inhibitors can be found, at least isolates from specific clinical situations should be tested for antimicrobial susceptibility. These are strains isolated from patients with brain abscess, endocarditis, osteomyelitis, arthritis, infected implants and prosthesis as well as those from persisting or recurrent bacteremia. Because the agar diffusion test yields unreliable results, minimal inhibitory concentration should be determined. Maybe the new 'E test' or the spiral gradient procedure can be used after evaluation.
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PMID:[The sensitivity of anaerobic bacteria to chemotherapeutic agents (Zurich, 1991)]. 181 9

The clinical and bacteriological features of 51 infections due to Streptococcus milleri observed in 43 patients over a 2-year period were reviewed. Clinical syndromes included bacteremia in 6 cases, endocarditis in 4 cases, cellulitis and subcutaneous abscesses in 8 cases, pleural empyema in 8 cases, brain abscesses in 5 cases, abdominal infections in 5 cases, and other miscellaneous infections in 15 cases. An underlying condition was associated with infection in 33/43 patients (77%). S. milleri was the only pathogen isolated in 19 patients (44%). All strains of S. milleri were susceptible to penicillin. Surgery was combined with antimicrobial therapy in 27 (63%) patients. Nine patients died during hospitalization, and death was directly related to S. milleri infection in 4 patients (9%). These results confirm that S. milleri frequently causes serious suppurative infections and that species identification is a clinically useful procedure.
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PMID:Clinical and bacterial features of infections caused by Streptococcus milleri. 181 25


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