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

A 10-year analysis of 113 cases of staphylococcal endocarditis seen in two Washington, D.C., hospitals is presented. 96% of the cases occurred in parenteral drug addicts, but 4% complicated septicemia from known foci of infection. Coagulase positive staphylococcus was responsible for 97% of the infection, and the rest were caused by coagulase negative staphyloccus. Except in four patients with previously known cardiac murmurs, infection occurred on normal valves in these patients. Infection was isolated to the tricuspid valve in 71%, to the mitral valve in 6% and to the aortic valve in 3.5% of our cases; and more than one cardiac valve was affected in the remaining patients. All patients were treated with antibiotics based on bacterial sensitivity testing. The mortality from isolated tricuspid endocarditis was 5%, from isolated mitral endocarditis 33%, and from isolated aortic valve endocarditis 100%. The overall mortality was 18%. The better prognosis documented for acute tricuspid endocarditis is related to the much less severe haemodynamic consequences of acute tricuspid regurgitation, and the probably milder consequences of septic pulmonary embolism compared with coronary or cerebral embolism.
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PMID:Staphylococcal endocarditis: clinical observations on 113 patients. 9 45

As long as the illicit use of heroin and other drugs continues in our society, infective endocarditis will remain a significant medical problem in the drug-using population. The majority of infections are produced by S. aureus, and the tricuspid valve is most commonly involved. Addicts, unlike the general population, may also develop endocarditis with a variety of gram-negative bacilli and have a higher incidence of fungal infection. The outcome of each individual infection is dependent on the prompt recognition of the underlying valvular infection and the institution of antimicrobial therapy. Infection of the tricuspid valve has a much more favorable prognosis than does infection of the aortic or mitral valves. Fungal endocarditis, and frequently gram-negative bacillary endocarditis, require valvular surgery to effect a cure.
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PMID:Infective endocarditis in the narcotic addict. 11 17

Five heroin addicts were treated for endocarditis caused by Pseudomonas cepacia. Two of these infections occurred in patients with no known heart disease whereas the others occurred at sites of previous endocarditis or valve prostheses. Infection was indolent in four patients but was associated with shock and skin lesions suggestive of ecthyma gangrenosum in the fifth. After failure of chloramphenicol and kanamycin, all patients were treated with a combination of sulfamethoxazole, trimethoprim and polymyxin plus heart valve resection or replacement.
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PMID:Subacute and acute endocarditis due to Pseudomonas cepacia in heroin addicts. 16 59

Infection of 300 mice of the Swiss race with Coxsackie B3 viruses gave rise to chronic myocarditis and endocarditis. The virus was cultured from the heart muscle 9 days post infection. Between days 18 and 108 post infection, virtually all mice showed evidence of an active inflammatory process in the myocardium, and in one half there was proliferation of endothelial cells, and infitration and fibrosis in the endocardium. Immunomorphologic studies demonstrated the precence of antiheart antibodies in the blood serum, and Coxsackie B3 antigen and immunoglobulin deposits in the myocardium and endocardium. Highest levels of antivirus antibodies were observed 18 days post infection.
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PMID:Pathogenesis of chronic myocarditis in mice infected with coxsackie B3 viruses. 22 Sep 33

Sixteen patients with coagulase-negative staphylococcal endocarditis were treated at the University of Minnesota Hospitals between January 1970 and September 1977. In six patients, endocarditis developed after prosthetic valve surgery; among the other ten patients (the medical group), eight had known antecedent valvular disease. The skin was thought to be the source of infection in eight patients, suggesting that prompt treatment of skin infections and avoidance of injections in patients with valvular disease are important measures in the prevention of this disease. Patients with prosthetic valve endocarditis were infected with antibiotic-resistant organisms and had a higher mortality than those in the medical group (83% versus 20%). Bacterial isolates from three patients with prosthetic valve endocarditis were resistant to methicillin, and two of these three isolates also were resistant to cephalothin by quantitative susceptibility testing. The only patient with prosthetic valve endocarditis to survive was operated upon early in the course of his illness. These observation, coupled with the high mortality in this series and in others, has prompted us to advocate early surgery in prosthetic valve endocarditis.
Infection 1979
PMID:Endocarditis caused by coagulase-negative staphylococci. 25 87

Data on mycoses known to be imported into the United Kingdom are sparse. Estimates on the prevalence of fungal infections have to be based on indirect and incomplete figures, obtained from isolation figures and reports of individual cases to co-ordinating centres such as the Mycological Reference Laboratory and the Communicable Disease Surveillance Centre of the Public Health Laboratory Service. Imported species of dermatophytes account for less than 1% of the total number of isolations made annually at mycological laboratories throughout the U.K. A suggested prevalence of dermatophytosis in this country is c. 250 000 cases per annum. Trichophyton rubrum may now be the most common species of dermatophyte. Other estimates of the frequencies with which infections are recorded each year include mycetoma (7-10), histoplasmosis (2-5), aspergilloma (50-80), invasive aspergillosis (10-30), Candida vaginitis (greater than or equal to 1 000 000), invasive candidiasis (10-80), Candida endocarditis (1-2) and cryptococcosis (6-10).
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PMID:Imported fungal infections. 52 46

In a prospective clinical and bacteriological study of 192 consecutive patients with septicemia admitted during the period 1967--1971 to a hospital for infectious diseases, 31 cases of proved (group I) and 10 with probably (group II) bacterial endocarditis were observed and analysed with regard to a variety of factors. The incidence of bacterial endocarditis was 3 per 1 000 admissions. The mean age of the patients was 52.6 years; there was no sex predominance. In about one third of the patients apparently normal valves were involved. Underlying non-cardiac factors were present in two thirds, even in younger age groups, in which chronic alcoholism and intravenous drug abuse were frequent. Secondary manifestations from various organs were noted in about three quarters of the patients, in one quarter already on admission. alpha-Hemolytic streptococci and staphylococci were most commonly isolated, followed by gram-negative enteric rods, beta-hemolytic streptococci, enterococci, and pneumococci. A probable portal of entry could be assumed in 80% of the patients and could often be related to the type of bacteria involved. In some cases, diagnostic or therapeutic procedures preceded the disease. A subacute course of the endocarditis was observed in one third of the patients and all these had alpha-hemolytic streptococci or enterococci. The aortic and mitral valves were equally often involved and equally often infected by alpha-hemolytic streptococci. In 4 patients, 3 of whom were drug addicts, the tricuspid valve was probably involved; all were infected by staphylococci. In one case autopsy revealed a mural endocarditis.
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PMID:Bacterial endocarditis. I. A prospective study of etiology, underlying factors and foci of infection. 71 83

Bacterial endocarditis caused by Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans is a rare disease. A 48-year-old man who had a Starr-Edwards aortic valve prosthesis inserted in 1972 was admitted for evaluation of confusion, headaches, anorexia, weight loss, diarrhea and weakness. Six blood cultures yielded gram-negative organisms which were subsequently identified as A. actinomycetemcomitans. Treatment with ampicillin and gentamicin resulted in cure which has been maintained after an observation period of eleven months. This represents the second report of A. actinomycetemcomitans endocarditis in a patient with a prosthetic valve.
Infection 1977
PMID:Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans endocarditis in a patient with a prosthetic aortic valve. 88 Dec 58

Numerous factors in the human body can influence and cause variations in the pharmacokinetics of aminoglycoside antibiotics. As a result of these observations it has been demanded that all treatments with aminoglycosides be monitored. This would only appear to be justified for a limited number of indications, however, which involve very high dosages, long-term therapy and impaired renal function. The advantages of monitoring treatment are demonstrated in a patient with endocarditis.
Infection 1977
PMID:[Indications for the monitoring of aminoglycoside serum concentrations in internal medicine (author's transl)]. 88 Dec 61

Verrucous endocarditis in the newborn is not only a rare but also a problematic disease as concerns its etiology and pathogenesis. In the older literature septic infections of mother and child were said to be the causative factors. Recent experiences with the pathophysiology and pathomorphology of shock have also shown new aspects of the origin of this kind of endocarditis. Two cases from our own experience are compared with 7 cases from the literature. In the maternal history of gestation there was no infectious disease which could explain the endocarditis of the newborn. A short time after delivery the children showed a respiratory distress syndrome and died between 1.5 hours and 3 days after birth. At autopsy verrucous vegetations up to 8 X 5 X 4 mm in diameter were found on the tricuspid valve in 8 cases, once on the mitral valve and twice on both mitral and tricuspid valve. Malformations of the hearts were not noted. Histologically the fresh vegetations consist of clotted platelets and a fibrin network. At the base of the verruca the valvular leaflets show an edema, occasional fibroblastic changes and tiny lympho-histiocytic infiltrates in the subendothelial layer. Extracardial findings are hyaline membranes of the lungs and microthrombi in small vessels of lung, heart, liver and kidney due to shock and consumption-coagulopathy. According to Mittermayer et al. (1971a, b) who studied endocarditis verrucosa simplex in adults and animal-experiments endocarditis verrucosa simplex of the newborn is probably caused by intrauterine or perinatal shock.
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PMID:[Pathogenesis of endocarditis verrucosa simplex in the newborn (author's transl)]. 92 7


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