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Query: UMLS:C0014118 (
endocarditis
)
15,629
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Infective valvular
endocarditis
, whether occurring on a native or prosthetic heart valve, continues to carry a serious prognosis. Death is usually due to
congestive heart failure
, arrhythmia, or embolic complications, rather than infection per se. While antimicrobial therapy and medications to control
congestive heart failure
continue to be the treatment of choice in most cases, early valve replacement is indicated in certain situations. During the past four years, 12 patients underwent valve replacement for infective
endocarditis
. Six patients underwent elective valve replacement after antibiotic or antifugal therapy. All survived the operation and were improved. Six other patients underwent emergency valve replacement. Two patients died intraoperatively and their operations, in retrospect, were delayed unnecessarily. Four patients survived and are improved. Prosthetic valve replacement during the course of infective valvular
endocarditis
should be considered based on indications such as
congestive heart failure
, rhythm disturbances, etc, rather than the status of the infection.
...
PMID:Surgical treatment of infective valvular endocarditis. 13 52
Histological and ultrastructural studies were performed on myocardial biopsies and aortic and mitral valve leaflets obtained during an operation on a patient with Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (S.L.E.).
Congestive heart failure
and valvular dysfunction appeared five years after the diagnosis of S.L.E. was made. On histological study, aortic and mitral valve leaflets are uniformly thickened by fibrous tissue with a nodular appearance. No active
endocarditis
was associated with the fibrous scarring. Atrial myocardium and papillary muscle countain a fibrous net-work discret in the former, extensive in the latter. The scattered foci of fibrosis in the papillary muscle surround vessels without obliteration or parietal necrosis. Ultrastructurally their lumina appears narrowed by prominent endothelial cells with cytoplasmic aggregates of tubuloreticular structures (T.R.S.). These tubules are also present in some endocardial endothelial cells but are rare in the normal intrapapillary or atrial vessels that are not associated with a scar. Myocardial fibrous foci enclose atrophic and severely degenerated cardiac muscle cells; other cells situated at the periphery of the foci are normal in size or hypertrophic and moderately degenerated. The most altered muscle cells show an important loss of myofibrils, a proliferation of sarcoplasmic reticulum in myofibril free spaces, or necrosis with macrophagic resorption. Focal changes with loss of myofilaments, Z material streaming and concentric lamellar bodies are found in moderately degenerate cardiac muscle cells. The remaining papillary muscle cells and the atrial cells are all hypertrophied without degeneration. These changes suggest that focal myocardial fibrosis and associated cardiac muscle cell degeneration may be responsible for impaired cardiac performance in some patients with S.L.E. According to the constant topographic relation between the narrowed vessels whose endothelial cells contain T.R.S. and the surrounding fibrous foci, we believe that the myocardial fibrous patches may correspond to scarring of microinfarcts related to active S.L.E. vascularitis.
...
PMID:[Systemic lupus erythematosus and congestive heart failure. Heart histological and ultrastructural study (author's transl)]. 14 71
The abdominal left ventricular assist device (ALVAD) is an order of magnitude more effective than conventional intra-aortic balloon pumping (IABP) in unloading and providing circulatory support to the failing left ventricle. This is a report of a unique case which demonstrates that in the absence of pulmonary vascular obstruction or constriction, the ALVAD can substitute for both left and right heart function. A 21-year-old patient with a congenital bicuspid aortic valve developed acute valvular
endocarditis
which rapidly progressed to
congestive heart failure
. An operation was undertaken, the mitral and aortic valves were excised and replaced by porcine heterografts, and a fistula from the right sinus of Valsalva to the right ventricle was closed. When coronary circulation was restored, irreversible ischemic contracture of the left ventricle, or "stone heart" syndrome, developed and emergency ALVAD or partial artificial heart implantation was effected. This device functioned as a total artificial heart for nearly six days, while a donor heart was sought. The patient then underwent removal of the ALVAD and cardiac and renal allografting. The transplanted heart functioned well, but the patient expired fifteen days later from gram-negative sepsis.
...
PMID:Partial artificial heart (ALVAD) use with subsequent cardiac and renal allografting in a patient with stone heart syndrome. 36 90
Mitral valve replacement is considered when there is severe mitral stenosis, severe mitral insufficiency or a combination of the two. Ordinarily, surgical replacement is considered only for patients who are in functional classes III or IV and do not respond to medical management. Patients with symptomatic mitral stenosis should be treated with mitral commissurotomy whenever possible. Patients selected for commissurotomy should have a pliable valve, no other major valve dysfunction, sinus rhythm, no systemic embolism and good left ventricular function. Early operation is not ordinarily required. Mitral insufficiency may require mitral valve replacement in six rather common settings: rheumatic disease, rupture of mitral chordae tendineae, postinfarction rupture of a papillary muscle, intractable infective
endocarditis
, floppy mitral valve and malfunction of a prosthetic valve. Rupture of mitral chordae tendineae can usually be recognized from the history, physical examination, echocardiogram and angiocardiogram. Severe left ventricular papillary muscle dysfunction is usually due to cardiac infarction, and occurs within the first 9 days of infarction. When only a papillary muscle tip is ruptured the patient may survive long enough for a mitral valve replacement. In infective
endocarditis
, operation is more often needed because of
congestive heart failure
than because of refractory infection. Evidence of mitral stenosis or insufficiency in a patient with a previously implanted prosthetic valve usually indicates an urgent need for study and early operation. Uncommon causes of mitral incompetence that may require valve replacement are endocardial fibroelastosis, Marfan's syndrome, calcified mitral anulus, osteogenesis imperfecta, methysergide-induced heart disease and carcinoid heart disease.
...
PMID:Indications for surgical replacement of the mitral valve. With particular reference to common and uncommon causes of mitral regurgitation. 37 33
A man of 54 had been treated over a 15 month period for pulmonary tuberculosis when aged 41, and had lived on the Ivory Coast and then in the Cameroons for 20 years. Eye signs were discovered in January 1971, and these, together with an eosinophilia, pointed to a possible filariasis which was later confirmed by immunofluorescence and the fixation of complement. Three months later, the patient developed
congestive cardiac failure
. On the 4th day of treatment with Notizine, multiple systemic emboli occurred, leading to death. Autopsy showed endomyocardial fibrosis with multiple ulceration of the left ventricle, the site of the emboli. The aetiology from filariasis and the mechanism of ulceration of the parietal
endocarditis
are discussed.
...
PMID:[Fatal emboligenic ulcerative endomyocardial fibrosis in filariasis]. 40 91
In a prospective study 31 cases of proved and 10 of highly suspected bacterial endocarditis were analysed. Valve incompetence was the usual consequence but stenosis occurred in 3 cases, all fatal.
Congestive heart failure
developed in two-thirds. Secondary manifestations were common and as often caused by alpha-streptococci as by other bacteria. Initial antibiotic treatment was mainly applied according to a fixed schedule, generally with continuous intravenous infusion, followed by oral therapy. In 10 patients, the infection was still active after 6 weeks of therapy. Therefore, we now use intermittent injections or infusions for at least 4--6 weeks. Within a year, 9 patients died from uncontrolled infection together with
congestive heart failure
, and 1 from heart failure and active chronic endocarditis. In 4, myocardial abscesses or inflammations were found. All 10 had underlying factors or advanced stages of the disease. Of 18 patients with alpha-streptococci or enterococci none died from
endocarditis
, as against 10 of 23 with other or unknown bacteria. Follow-up yielded valuable information on one-third of the patients. The mortality during the initial hospital stay was 22%, after 1 year 24% and after 5 years 39%.
...
PMID:Bacterial endocarditis. II. A prospective study with clinical, laboratory and therapeutic observations. 41 66
The clinical utility of two dimensional echocardiography in assessing bioprosthetic and left ventricular function was studied in 40 consecutive patients 1 week to 60 months after valve replacement surgery. These patients were referred to obtain normal baseline studies as well as to evaluate complications:suspected
endocarditis
, embolic phenomena and
congestive heart failure
of unknown cause. Independent M mode echocardiograms were also obtained in each patient. Confirmation of ultrasonic studies was by cardiac catheterization with angiography, surgery and pathologic study in 10 patients; cardiac catheterization with angiography alone in 7 patients; surgery and pathologic study in 3 patients; autopsy in 3 patients; blood cultures to confirm or exclude
endocarditis
in 10 patients; and confirmation on clinical grounds in 7 patients. Technically adequate two dimensional studies were recorded in 39 of 40 subjects. Two dimensional echocardiography accurately assessed 15 of 16 patients with an abnormal bioprosthetic valve and a normal left ventricle (1 of 16 patients had a false positive two dimensional echocardiogram); 8 of 8 patients suspected to have prosthetic valve or left ventricular dysfunction but who were normal; 7 of 7 patients with a normal prosthesis and an abnormal left ventricle; the one patient with an abnormal valve and left ventricle; and 7 of 7 clinically normal patients who were referred for baseline studies. In summary, the two-dimensional echocardiogram demonstrated a 97 percent diagnostic accuracy rate which was significantly greater than the 67 percent (P less than 0.001) for M mode echocardiography in the same group of patients. It is concluded that two dimensional echocardiography has excellent diagnostic accuracy in assessing bioprosthetic and left ventricular function and is superior to M mode echocardiography in evaluating patients after such valve replacement.
...
PMID:Two dimensional echocardiographic assessment of patients with bioprosthetic valves. 42 Jan 2
The clinical records of 52 patients who were diagnosed clinically as having had infective
endocarditis
despite negative blood cultures have been reviewed. They differed at presentation from patients with positive blood cultures in more frequent receipt of antibiotics prior to culture and more frequent signs of major systemic emboli and
congestive heart failure
. Response of culture-negative patients with fever to empiric antibiotic therapy was correlated with survival, in that 92 per cent of the patients who became afebrile within the first week of therapy liver, whereas only 50 per cent of those who did not become afebrile lived. Deaths resulted primarily from major systemic emboli and from uncontrollable
congestive heart failure
due to valvular insufficiency. In 25 cases, valvular tissue was examined histologically. In 15 cases, vegetations were seen and organisms identified; in six cases, only vegetations were seen; and in four cases (16 per cent), the clinical diagnosis of infective
endocarditis
was not substantiated in the pathologic report.
...
PMID:Infective endocarditis with negative blood cultures. An analysis of 52 cases. 42 Feb 48
The records of 20 patients who underwent mitral valve replacement for complications of bacterial endocarditis were reviewed. Although the indications for surgery were the same as those for patients with aortic
endocarditis
, major emboli (cerebral, coronary or retinal) prompted surgery in 8 of 20 patients, a much higher incidence than reported for surgery in aortic valve
endocarditis
. Eighteen of the patients had mitral regurgitation; 14 of these had severe
congestive heart failure
, but the development of congestive failure tended to be more insidious than in patients with aortic
endocarditis
. Continued septicemia despite appropriate antibiotics was the least common indication for surgery. Sixteen of the 20 patients were salvaged by surgery, although some had major residual deficits, related mainly to preoperative emboli. These results are a marked improvement in the expected 90-100 percent mortality rate for patients with these complications of
endocarditis
. The main reason for a poor result following surgery was temporization leading to continued deterioration of vital functions preoperatively. Reinfection of the prosthesis did not occur, and we do not consider duration of preoperative antibiotic therapy an important factor in the decision to perform surgery.
...
PMID:Surgery for mitral valve endocarditis. 42 72
This report describes the features and the course of a patient on maintenance hemodialysis in whom infective
endocarditis
of the aortic valve ensued. The subsequent development of intractable
congestive heart failure
necessitated aortic valve replacement. Use of intraoperative hemodialysis, facilitating the intraoperative and postoperative management of the patient, is described. Following valve replacement the patient did well with no evidence of
congestive heart failure
.
...
PMID:Intraoperative hemodialysis during cardiopulmonary bypass in chronic renal failure. 43 Nov 16
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