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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.
...
PMID:Surgical treatment of infective endocarditis in hemodialysis patients. 63 Jul 44
Thirty-three patients with viridans streptococcal infective
endocarditis
were treated for two weeks with intramuscular procaine pencillin, 1.2 million units every 6 hours, plus streptomycin, 500 mg intramuscularly every 12 hours. Nine patients (27%) had infections with relatively penicillin-resistant microorganisms (MIC greater than 0.1 microgram/ml or MBC greater than or equal 3.12 microgram/ml). Follow-up ranged from 2 months to 3.5 years. There were no relapses; Mild vestibular toxicity developed in one patient. One patient died two months after completion of antimicrobial therapy from sudden onset of severe
congestive heart failure
; Seven patients required cardiac valve replacement after completion of antimicrobial therapy. None died. We believe that this therapeutic regimen is effective antimicrobial therapy for infective
endocarditis
caused by viridans streptococci, irrespective of in vitro microbiologic data.
...
PMID:Short-term intramuscular therapy with procaine penicillin plus streptomycin for infective endocarditis due to viridans streptococci. 63 38
We have evaluated three patients with Haemophilus parainfluenzae
endocarditis
. Two of the three had underlying heart disease. All presented with fever, chills and malaise of less than two weeks' duration. Mitral valve involvement led to
congestive heart failure
in two of three cases. Treatment proved difficult, despite normally adequate dosages of antibiotics to which the pathogens were sensitive in vitro (ampicillin, 12-20 gm/dag; gentamicin, 3-5 mg/kg/day). Two patients were cured; one died. There was a suggestion of an inverse correlation between vegetation mass and favorable clinical response. Review of the English literature disclosed 22 documented cases of H parainfluenzae
endocarditis
, including 12 in the antibiotic era.
...
PMID:Bacterial endocarditis due to Haemophilus parainfluenzae. 83 83
The echocardiographic findings and case reports of three patients with active Streptococcal
endocarditis
and severe
congestive heart failure
are presented. All three had pathologically proven vegetations on the mitral valve; however, only the two with calcification of the vegetations were successfully demonstrated on echocardiography. Clinical and pathological differences are highlighted and prior case reports in the literature are reviewed. The nonspecific nature of echoes recorded from valvular vegetation is stressed and factors in their echocardiographic detection are discussed.
...
PMID:The value and limitations of echocardiography in recording mitral valve vegetations. 86 41
This study follows the clinical course of 22 patients in the active phase of infective
endocarditis
who inderwent valve replacement at North Carolina Memorial Hospital between March, 1966, and March, 1976. At the time of operation, there was gross valve tissue destruction in 16 patients, verrucae in nine, ruptured chordae tendineae in five, and myocardial or annular abscess formation in five. Four patients survived less than 6 months after the initial operation. One survived almost 3 years before dying of recurrent carcinoma of the lung. The remaining 17 patients have been followed an average of 4.6 years. Major postoperative complications were as follows: paravalvular problem, five patients;
congestive heart failure
, seven patients; complete heart block, three patients; systemic arterial emboli, four patients. These complications often were associated with the preoperative presence of annular or myocardial abscess. Thus it appears that postoperative complications often result from annular structural deficiencies rather than being directly related to active infection.
...
PMID:The long-term outlook for valve replacement in active endocarditis. 92 13
The endocardial fibroelastosis (EFE) is the most frequent cardiomyopathy. This disease is characterised by endocardial hyperplasia due to proliferation of elastic and collagenous fibres. There are primary and secondary forms. Within the primary form, the infantile form is the most frequent and of greatest importance to the pediatrician. This form is more a syndrom than a distinct disease. It is a reaction of the endocard due to several noxes. Lately a possible viral etiology is being discussed e.g. Parotitis, Coxsackie or other viruses. Clinical criteria for diagnosis are: cardiomegaly, left ventricular hypertrophy seen in 97% in the ECG, the absence of a murmur (or a soft apical mumur) absence of cyanosis and absence of systemic disease. Differential diagnosis is mainly between fibroplastic parietal
endocarditis
(FPE), cardiovascular collagenosis (CC) and endomyocard fibrosis (EMF). In FPE thrombosis is frequent and typically there is eosinophilia. CC is found in South Africa and is characterised by edema and fibrinoid necrosis. MEF is present mainly in Uganda, Nigeria and South India, characterised by endocardial fibrosis, valve involvement and eosinophilia. The obstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is characterised by a pronounced cardiomegaly, insufficient weight gain as well as dyspnea and cyanosis. Catheterization shows a gradient across one or both of the outflow tracts due to hypertrophic subaortic or subpulmonic stenosis. Therapy of EFE consists in treating the
cardiac decompensation
and according to the severity of the disease, in steroids.
...
PMID:[Endocardial fibroelastosis (E.F.) and its differential diagnosis]. 94 82
Acute aortic regurgitation due to ulcerative
endocarditis
developed in 3 children aged 10, 6, and 7 years, respectively. All had congenital aortic valve lesions. Intractable
congestive heart failure
ensued about 2 weeks, 1 week, and a few days, respectively, after onset of infection. Two patients were operated on in the acute stage, and in both, perivalvular spread of the infection was found with abscess formation of the right sinus of Valsalva perforating through the interventricular septum to the right ventricle; valve replacement and repair were performed, but both patients died. The correct diagnosis was missed in the third patient, who was thought to have myocarditis and who died one week after onset of infection: at autopsy a perforation of a bicuspid aortic valve and an aneurysm of the sinus of Valsalva were found.
...
PMID:Acute aortic regurgitation and abscess of sinus of Valsalva due to fulminating ulcerative endocarditis. Report of three fatal cases in children. 94 13
Forty-eight cases of host valve
endocarditis
and 24 cases of prosthetic valve
endocarditis
occurring during a concurrent period of time were analyzed to assess differences between the two groups. The over-all incidence of prosthetic valve
endocarditis
during this 40 month period was 4.4%. The symptoms and signs in both groups were similar, except that PVE patients had more frequent occurrences of changing heart murmurs and splenic and cerebral emboli. Spleen scans may be helpful in the diagnosis of selected cases of culture-negative prosthetic valve
endocarditis
. There was no significant difference between the two groups for the various infecting microorganisms. However, the culture-negative prosthetic valve group had a mortality rate of 77.7% compared to 46.2% for the host valve group. In the HVE patients the oral cavity or urinary tract was the probable source of infection in 50.0% of the patients. In about one third of HVE cases, there was strong evidence that the infection was related to a therapeutic procedure, whereas nearly half of the PVE patients had clinical evidence of an extracardiac infection at the time of open-heart surgery. We emphasize the need for good pre- and postoperative surveillance to eliminate possible predisposing infections and appropriate antibiotic prophylaxis in all patients with valvular disease at times of risk. The survival rate in patients with prosthetic valve
endocarditis
was highest in those patients who received "appropriate" antibiotics and, if significant
congestive heart failure
was present, surgical intervention was necessary.
...
PMID:A comparative study of 48 host valve and 24 prosthetic valve endocarditis cases. 96 75
Homograft aortic valve replacement was done in 103 patients and prosthetic aortic valve replacement in 106 between January 1962 and December 1973. Patients who received homograft and prosthetic valves were compared with respect to age, sex, preoperative functional impairment, infection, dyspnea, angina, hemodynamics, chest X-ray, electrocardiogram, associated operations, early and late mortality, and valve failure. Combined total mortality was 28% (12% operative, 8% first postoperative year, 8% late). Ten percent of valve required replacement. One year after operation, 70% of survivors were asymptomatic, 27% were improved, and 3% were unchanged or between homograft and prosthetic valve replacement. Valve-related failure and infections were more common after homograft aortic valve replacement. Emboli, hemorrhage, and hemolysis were commoner after prosthetic valve replacement. Fungal infections occurred in five homograft patients but in no patient with a prosthetic aortic valve. Severe properative symptoms or recent
endocarditis
was associated with greater mortality and valve failure in both the homograft and the prosthetic series. Increased mortality and failure was also seen in patients with either preoperative aortic regurgitation with high left ventricular end-diastolic pressure and low cardiac index, or aortic stenosis with cardiomegaly or roentgenographic evidence of
congestive heart failure
. Therefore, in two series of patients at equal risk, mortality and valve failure were similar for homograft and prosthetic aortic valve replacement.
...
PMID:Homograft and prosthetic aortic valve replacement: a comparative study. 99 28
During a six-year period 15 consecutive patients with isolated aortic regurgitation due to infective
endocarditis
were encountered. None had prior significant aortic valve disease. Elective valve replacement was performed in 13 patients; emergency operation was needed in only 1 patient because of intractable pulmonary edema. One patient died suddenly from acute heart block while undergoing medical treatment. Preoperative cardiac catheterization studies in 10 of the 14 patients revealed gross elevations of left ventricular end-diastolic pressure, pulmonary hypertension, depressed cardiac output, and 3 to 4+ aortic regurgitation. There was 1 early and 1 late postoperative death, both due to systemic embolism, yielding an overall surgical mortality of 14%. After a mean follow-up of 18 months, 10 of the 11 patients are in New York Heart Association Functional Class I. Most patients with acute aortic regurgitation secondary to infective
endocarditis
have clinically observable
congestive heart failure
and will eventually require valve replacement. If
congestive heart failure
can be stabilized by a medical regimen, a course of antibiotic therapy can be administered and elective valve replacement can be performed. The time taken for preoperative antibiotic treatment is not associated with irreversible myocardial damage sufficient to influence the results of operation.
...
PMID:Surgical treatment of acute aortic regurgitation in infective endocarditis. 99 71
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