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

During a 17 month period, 25 hospitalized adult patients had blood cultures reported as positive for Pseudomonas maltophila. Review of the hospital records suggested that these were contaminants and that blood for coagulation studies and for cultures that were subsequently positive had been drawn simultaneously. The source of contamination appeared to be black-top evacuated collection tubes used for coagulation studies in adults. Cultures of the liquid anticoagulant tubes yielded a pure growth of greater than 10(5) colony forming units (CFU)/cc of Ps. maltophilia on blood agar. Mock trials demonstrated that following venipuncture by syringe, inoculation of contaminated black-top tubes prior to inoculation of blood culture bottles would yield false-positive blood cultures (pseudosepticemia). One patient being treated for streptococcal prosthetic valve endocarditis and having frequent coagulation studies with blood obtained via direct venipuncture into evacuated collection tubes was found to have superinfection of his prosthetic valve with Ps. maltophilia at autopsy. Prosthetic valve infection may have occurred after reflux of contaminated anticoagulant from an evacuated collection tube directly into the vein. Contaminated evacuated collection tubes are a potential source of confusion in the diagnosis of infection as well as a potential source of true infection.
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PMID:Pseudomonas maltophilia pseudosepticemia. 63 55

A 61-year-old man with Trichosporon cutaneum (T. cutaneum) prosthetic valve endocarditis is reported. He had had an aortic valve replacement for rheumatic heart disease 3 years earlier. Onset of the valve infection was subacute. A systolic murmur was noted on admission. Subsequently, he developed conjunctival hemorrhages, hematuria and transient episodes of confusion, aphasia and cranial nerve palsies. Three of 17 blood cultures taken over 3 weeks were positive for T. cutaneum. He was given amphotericin B (AmB) and 5-fluorocytosine (5FC); T. cutaneum infection of prosthetic aortic valve was identified. The aortic valve was replaced. Postoperatively he developed refractory ventricular fibrillation and died. Striking synergy to AmB-5FC and AmB-rifampin combinations was demonstrated in vitro.
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PMID:Trichosporon cutaneum endocarditis. 71 85

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.
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PMID:Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans endocarditis in a patient with a prosthetic aortic valve. 88 Dec 58

Complications after heart valve replacement remain a substantial source of morbidity and mortality despite continuing advances in surgical care and prosthetic design. Infectious endocarditis occurs in about 4 percent of patients and may appear early (within 60 days) or late after operation. Endocarditis of early onset is commonly due to staphylococcal, fungal or gram-negative organisms and is fatal in 70 percent or more of cases. Infection of late onset is more often of streptococcal origin and the mortality rate is lower, about 35 percent. With either type, prompt recognition, vigorous and appropriate antimicrobial therapy and early consideration of surgical intervention are crucial. The postperfusion and postpericardiotomy syndromes are relatively common and relatively benign syndromes associated with postoperative fever. Their recognition is important to prevent confusion with endocarditis or sepsis and thus to reassure the patient and physician. Treatment is primarily symptomatic. Intravascular hemolysis occurs with most prosthetic heart valves but is more common with certain prostheses and with paraprosthetic valve regurgitation, with significant hemolytic anemia in 5 to 15 percent. Oral iron replacement therapy is effective in the majority of patients, but occasionally blood transfusion or reoperation for leak around the prosthesis is necessary. Prosthesis dysfunction due to thrombus may be recognized clinically by recurrence of heart failure, syncope, cardiomegaly and altered prosthetic valve sounds or new murmurs. Hemodynamic studies verify the diagnosis, and prompt reoperation is indicated for this potentially lethal problem. Systemic embolization has decreased markedly with the introduction of cloth-covered prostheses and is frequently related to erratic or ineffective anticoagulant therapy. We continue to recommend anticoagulant therapy for all patients with prosthetic heart valves unless there is a major contraindication.
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PMID:Diagnosis and management of complications of prosthetic heart valves. 109 75

Three decades after it was demonstrated that nonejection systolic clicks and late systolic murmurs have a mitral valve origin and that a specific syndrome is associated with the primary degenerative mitral lesion, numerous questions remain unanswered. A principal cause of confusion is the use of the term 'prolapse', which essentially implies a pathological state, in many patients with minimal evidence of a mitral valve anomaly. It should be recognised that no specific feature, whether evaluated by high standard echocardiography or indeed by careful morphological and histological examination, can be defined which distinguishes a normal variant from a pathological valve. There is a gradation from the normal billowing during ventricular systole of mitral leaflet bodies to marked billowing. With advanced billowing or floppy leaflets, failure of leaflet edge apposition supervenes (true prolapse). This is functionally abnormal and allows mitral regurgitation. Prolapse in turn may progress to a flail leaflet and hence gross regurgitation. Relatively rare complications of this degenerative mitral valve anomaly include systemic emboli, infective endocarditis, arrhythmias and, arguably, autonomic nervous system abnormalities. An attempt is made to clarify the management of some symptoms and other aspects of mitral prolapse-including rheumatic anterior leaflet prolapse (without billowing) which remains prevalent in South Africa and Third World countries.
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PMID:Mitral valve billowing and prolapse--an overview. 144 36

We have examined case records for patients who received teicoplanin alone for endocarditis or Staphylococcus aureus bacteraemia. All patients with streptococcal endocarditis were cured (viridans group 14/14; Group D 4/4). Cure rates for other organisms were: Enterococcus faecalis 3/5; S. aureus 5/10 and coagulase negative staphylococci 2/3. Doses for six patients who failed because of poor response were 3.3-4.2 mg/kg. Teicoplanin treatment cured 41/48 patients with S. aureus bacteraemia; treatment failed in two patients because of adverse events. Doses in the remaining treatment failures were 2.1-5.0 mg/kg. In comparison, 48 patients in Dundee hospitals received ten different drugs in 20 combinations for S. aureus bacteraemia; 29 patients received cloxacillin or flucloxacillin but initial doses varied from 0.25-2.0 g. We conclude that the European database does provide evidence that teicoplanin monotherapy is effective for serious infection with Gram-positive bacteria. Doses for staphylococcal infection should probably be at least 6 mg/kg. The upper limit of the teicoplanin dosage range remains to be determined but there is evidently considerable confusion about appropriate regimens for 'standard' therapy.
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PMID:Teicoplanin monotherapy of serious infections caused by gram-positive bacteria: a re-evaluation of patients with endocarditis or Staphylococcus aureus bacteraemia from a European open trial. 182 76

Branhamella catarrhalis was formerly regarded as a common, essentially harmless inhabitant of the pharynx. This misapprehension was caused, in part, by confusion with another pharyngeal resident, Neisseria cinerea. The two organisms can now be differentiated by the positive reactions of B. catarrhalis in tests for nitrate reduction and hydrolysis of tributyrin and DNase. B. catarrhalis is currently recognized as the third most frequent cause of acute otitis media and acute sinusitis in young children. It often causes acute exacerbations of chronic bronchopulmonary disease in older or immunocompromised adults and is incriminated occasionally in meningitis, endocarditis, bacteremia, conjunctivitis, keratitis, and urogenital infections. Virulence-associated factors, such as pili, capsules, outer membrane vesicles, iron acquisition proteins, histamine-synthesizing ability, resistance to the bactericidal action of normal human serum, and binding to the C1q complement component, have been identified in some strains. beta-Lactamase producing strains, first detected in 1976, have risen to approximately 75% worldwide. Thus far, however, practically all American strains of B. catarrhalis remain susceptible to alternative antibiotics. A possible selective advantage of recent isolates is their reportedly heightened tendency for adherence to oropharyngeal cells from patients with chronic bronchopulmonary disease.
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PMID:Branhamella catarrhalis: an organism gaining respect as a pathogen. 212 28

A 42-year-old male was admitted to Tokyo University Hospital because of confusion, aphasia and right hemiparesis. Cranial computed tomography and cerebral angiography demonstrated cerebral infarction due to occlusion of the left middle cerebral artery, while chest roentgenography disclosed a nodular shadow in the right upper lobe and swelling of right hilar and paratracheal lymph nodes. These findings suggested carcinoma of pulmonary origin and tumor-associated cerebral thrombosis, but a possibility of gastric cancer was raised by the finding of cervical lymph node biopsy which revealed signet ring cells in metastatic adenocarcinoma. He developed disseminated intravascular coagulation syndrome and died on the 83rd hospital day. Autopsy revealed adenocarcinoma of the lung with signet ring cells and non-bacterial thrombotic endocarditis which appeared to be responsible for the cerebral infarction. The relationship between adenocarcinoma of the lung with signet ring cells and non-bacterial thrombotic endocarditis was discussed.
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PMID:[An autopsy case of adenocarcinoma of the lung with signet ring cells, manifesting with aphasia and hemiparesis due to nonbacterial thrombotic endocarditis]. 248 83

In a prospective study of 178 episodes of community-acquired native valve infective endocarditis seen at St Thomas' Hospital between 1969 and 1987, 59 patients (33 per cent) presented with neurological disorders that included meningitis, toxic confusion, major thromboembolic phenomena and headache. A neurological presentation occurred in 54 per cent of all cases of staphylococcal endocarditis, but in only 19 per cent of episodes of 'viridans' streptococcal and enterococcal endocarditis. Overall one-third of patients with staphylococcal endocarditis presented with clinical features of meningitis (40 per cent with no cardiac murmur). The mortality rate for community-acquired native valve endocarditis was higher for those with a neurological presentation than without.
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PMID:Neurological presentations of native valve endocarditis. 261 35

The occurrence of central nervous system (CNS) complications was studied retrospectively in 150 patients with bacteremia caused by Staphylococcus aureus, Streptococcus pneumoniae, beta-hemolytic streptococci or Escherichia coli. The incidence and clinical manifestations of different CNS complications were noted during 1 month after the bacteremia. Special attention was paid to vascular complications (infarction or hemorrhage), infections (meningitis or brain abscess) and mental changes when they were the only signs of CNS origin (lowered level of consciousness, confusion or delirium). The risk of cerebral infarction was elevated in the patients with bacteremia during the first month after the positive blood culture as compared with the overall risk of stroke in the general population. 10/150 patients (7%) developed cerebral infarction during that month. Two of these cases were associated with bacterial meningitis and 1 with endocarditis. Mental changes as a main symptom of CNS origin occurred in 27% of patients with bacteremia. Increasing patient age predisposed to this complication. Mental changes were not associated with any bacterial species studied. Altogether 40% of the patients developed CNS complications, which were a significant risk factor for death during the first month after the bacteremia.
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PMID:Central nervous system complications in patients with bacteremia. 266 96


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