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

Eight new strains of Coxiella burnetii were isolated from chronic Q fever patients using centrifugationashell vial technique. Seven patients had endocarditis (including one patient with an immunodeficiency syndrome), and one had a vascular prosthesis infection. Three prototype strains, Nine Mile phase II, Q212 and Priscilla and eight new isolates were cultured in L 929 cells. Heterogeneity of their cytopathic effect was observed. DNAs of the eleven strains have been isolated and purified by standard procedures. Plasmid DNA was separated from chromosomal DNA by a low melting point gel. Electrophoresis in agarose gel showed that seven of the eight new strains had plasmids which were about 40 kb (plasmid V517 was used as size marker). Endonuclease-restriction analysis of the 8 human isolates is currently under investigation.
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PMID:Phenotypic and genotypic heterogeneity of 8 new human Coxiella burnetti isolates. 135 Jan 76

Major surgical procedures, especially when performed under general anesthesia, can depress immunological parameters measured in vitro. Therefore concern has been expressed that operation might have an adverse effect on the immune status of individuals infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Four HIV-positive patients without symptoms of HIV disease underwent cardiac valve replacement in consequence of infective endocarditis. After up to 15 months postoperatively, 3 patients are alive and well without signs of progressive immunodeficiency or recurrent endocarditis. One patient died of recurrent endocarditis without evidence of HIV-related disease on autopsy. Cardiac operation does not seem to accelerate HIV-related immunodeficiency.
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PMID:Cardiac valve replacement in patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus. 151 May 25

Three patients who were seropositive for human immunodeficiency virus underwent surgery for infected aneurysm of the abdominal aorta. Fever and abdominal pain were the principal presenting clinical features. None of the patients had any opportunistic infections or endocarditis. In two cases, a ruptured aneurysm was demonstrated radiographically. In the remaining case, sonograms were diagnostic. The organisms responsible were salmonella, Hemophilus influenzae, and Mycobacterium tuberculosis. In two cases, the infectious origin was evidenced by bacteriologic examination of the aortic wall, which revealed the presence of Salmonella enteritidis and Koch's bacillus. Although Hemophilus influenzae was not found in the aortic wall of the remaining case, the infectious origin of the aneurysm was established because preoperative blood cultures were positive for this pathogen, and pathohistologic examination of the specimen showed destruction associated with leukocyte infiltration of the aneurysmal wall. An in situ prosthetic graft replacement protected by omentum was performed in all three cases. Antibiotic therapy was continued for several weeks. All patients are well with follow-up ranging from 10 to 21 months. Infectious aneurysm associated with human immunodeficiency virus seropositivity results in bacterial infestation of an atheromatous aorta. Infected phenomena are promoted by cellular immunodeficiency. Surgery was justified in these cases because of the immediate threat of rupture.
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PMID:Human immunodeficiency virus and infected aneurysm of the abdominal aorta: report of three cases. 161 Jun 55

Between 1980 and 1989, 8 patients (5 men, 3 women; mean age 30 years) were operated upon in our department of right-sided infective endocarditis. Six patients were heroin addicts and among these 3 were HIV positive and 2 had confirmed AIDS. The most frequently encountered microorganisms (6 cases) were staphylococci. It was decided to operate because of persistent infection and haemodynamic deterioration. The infection involved the pulmonary valve in only 1 of the 8 patients. Surgery was performed during the acute phase in 5 patients and was conservative in 6 patients, consisting of excision of the vegetations or valvulectomy combined or not with valvuloplasty. A high mortality rate (3/8 cases) was observed only among patients operated upon in the acute phase. This may be due to the underlying immunodeficiency and poor haemodynamic state of these patients. Among survivors, the long-term results were excellent, with no recurrent endocarditis and no death, and with only one subsequent operation, 4 years after the first one, for residual tricuspic valve regurgitation. This study shows that patients with right-sided infective endocarditis should be operated upon outside the acute phase of the disease and as soon as complications appear, and that surgery should preferably be conservative.
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PMID:[Surgical treatment of right-sided infective endocarditis]. 183 Jan 43

Although resistance to Listeria monocytogenes infection requires intact T cell-mediated immunity, only 20 patients with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection and listeriosis (including one patient described herein) have been reported to date. Listeriosis developed before AIDS in five cases. Syndromes included meningitis in nine cases, bacteremia in nine, brain abscess in one, and endocarditis in one. Eighteen patients were treated with ampicillin, penicillin, or amoxicillin with or without aminoglycosides. Clinical and microbiologic responses were obtained in one patient with bacteremia treated with vancomycin and in one patient with meningitis treated with trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole. Three of the nine patients with meningitis died, as did the patient with brain abscess. All nine patients with bacteremia and the patient with endocarditis survived. No case of relapse was documented. L. monocytogenes, although uncommon, should be considered in the differential diagnosis of febrile illness, meningitis, and brain abscess in patients with HIV infection.
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PMID:Listeriosis in patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus. 201 9

We present 1 case of right sided endocarditis caused by Fusobacterium nucleatum in a patient with intravenous drug addiction and human immunodeficiency. The clinical features were fever, anemia, and pulmonary embolism. The echocardiogram showed a giant vegetation originated from the right atrial wall prolapsing in diastole into the right ventricle which disappeared after the patient presented pulmonary embolism. The clinical course was uncontrolled with empiric antimicrobial therapy but it was good with metronidazol. The cases previously described in the literature caused by gram-negative anaerobic bacteria are discussed and compared with the present case.
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PMID:[Right-sided endocarditis due to Fusobacterium nucleatum]. 204 51

Although listeriosis is an uncommon infection in patients with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, the frequency of listeriosis in New York City has increased because of the increase in the number of HIV-infected patients. The medical records of 30 patients admitted to three medical centers in New York City from 1981 to 1988 with infections due to Listeria monocytogenes were reviewed. Six patients had AIDS, one was seropositive and asymptomatic, and four had risk factors for HIV infection. While the annual number of cases of listeriosis in patients without risk factors for HIV infection was constant, 9 of the 11 patients with AIDS or with risk factors for HIV infection presented with listeriosis between 1985 and 1988, the last half of the survey period. These patients were male homosexuals or intravenous drug abusers, and all but one were black or Hispanic. Manifestations of listeriosis in patients with AIDS or with risk factors for HIV infection included bacteremia without apparent source in seven, meningitis in three, and endocarditis in one, syndromes that were similar to those in patients without risk factors for HIV infection. Ten of 11 patients were treated with penicillin or ampicillin, and 7 were also given an aminoglycoside. All patients responded well to therapy and no relapses were observed. Physicians should include antibiotics effective against L. monocytogenes when treating AIDS patients with meningitis of unknown origin and consider the diagnosis of listeriosis in patients with sepsis of unknown origin.
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PMID:Listeriosis in patients with HIV infection: clinical manifestations and response to therapy. 210 31

The authors describe a case of polymicrobial endocarditis in a 24-year-old patient with immunodeficiency and a damaged heart (mitral valve affection, septal defect). Among the mixed flora, comprising Streptococcus intermedius and two types of the genus Bacteroides, in the haemoculture also a microaerophil potentially pathogenic type Eikenella corrodens was cultivated. The authors describe the properties of Eikenella corrodens, its occurrence in man and its ability to produce an infectious process in primarily damaged organs (in particular the endocardium) in weakened subjects and drug addicts. The authors mention the diagnostic criteria for assessment of Eikenella corrodens and how to cultivate it from infectious material.
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PMID:[Eikenella corrodens as part of the polymicrobial flora in infectious endocarditis]. 215 Jun 17

The authors describe the case of a 24-year-old woman with valve disease. After a bout of respiratory tract infection, she was diagnosed to have bacterial endocarditis associated with mitral valve disease. The causative agents isolated included Eikenella corrodens, Streptococcus intermedius, Bacteroides oralis and Bacteroides bivius. At the same time, the patient was found to have developed IgA immunodeficiency. A complication accompanying the cardiac disease was spontaneous pneumothorax. Since antibiotic therapy had failed, the mitral valve was replaced by a prosthetic one. After the procedure, the patient had her teeth examined. The examination revealed complete destruction of tooth 36, thick layers of calculus and chronic gingivitis. E. corrodens was isolated also after microbiological examination of the patient's oral cavity. The reason for reporting on what we regard as an interesting case is that bacterial endocarditis with E. corrodens implicated as the causative agent is relatively rare; to date, polymicrobial endocarditis due to E. corrodens and other microorganisms has been described in intravenous drug addicts only.
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PMID:Eikenella corrodens infection of the oral cavity as a cause of bacterial endocarditis. 219 Jul 61

Cardiac abnormalities are frequently reported in patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). Much less is known about the true prevalence of cardiac involvement in patients with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. We prospectively examined 138 consecutive patients with HIV infection including 41 with AIDS, 49 with AIDS-related complex (ARC), 32 with chronic lymphoadenopathy syndrome (LAS) and 16 with asymptomatic HIV infection. Sixty-one patients had opportunistic infection. The prevalence of cardiac involvement progressively increased from patients with HIV infections or LAS (4%) to ARC (14%) to AIDS (37%). "Major" echocardiographic abnormalities (dilated cardiomyopathy and/or infective endocarditis and/or severe pericardial effusion) were identified in 3 patients (2%), "minor" abnormalities (mild pericardial effusion, hypokinesis of the interventricular septum, mild dilatation of the left ventricle in 21 (15%). Electrocardiographic abnormalities unassociated with echo abnormalities or clinical problems were seen in other 11 patients. End diastolic left ventricular dimension (normalized for body surface area) was higher among AIDS respect to pre-AIDS patients (30.1 +/- 7.1 vs 27.6 +/- 7.5; p less than 0.01) and among patients with respect to patients without opportunistic infections (29.5 +/- 6.5 vs 27.5 +/- 2.4; p less than 0.05). Left ventricular shortening fraction was lower in the subgroup with and absolute CD4 lymphocyte count less than 100/mm3 (31 +/- 7 vs 34 +/- 5; p less than 0.055). In conclusion, in a large, unselected group of patients with HIV infection, echocardiogram discloses cardiac abnormalities in 17% of the cases; their clinical relevance is generally low but in selected patients cardiac tamponade and/or dilated cardiomyopathy (secondary to viral myocarditis) may cause death.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Cardiac involvement in HIV infection: a prospective, multicenter clinical and echocardiographic study]. 224 21


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