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Query: UMLS:C0014118 (
endocarditis
)
15,629
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The complications arising out of the installation of pacemakers are listed and classified and it is suggested that a syndrome characterized by recurrent pleural effusion recalcitrant to the usual medico-depletive therapies, observed in four patients with pacemakers, should be included among such complications. The clinical pictures of the syndrome is described in detail and particular attention is paid to its date of onset in relation to installation of the pacemaker, early symptomatology, the most typical symptoms, clinico-humoral development, prognosis and therapy. Some theoretical and practical remarks are also offered, specifically three pathogenetic suggestions are formulated on the basis of clinical and developmental features but mainly in relation to humoral and immunological findings. These suggestions stress alternative interpretations of the syndrome: A) as an autoimmune disease arising secondary to surgical denaturation of myocardial and/or endocardial autoantigens; B) as a systemic autoimmune disease due to congenital or acquired insufficiency of immunological homeostasis; C) as a monosymptomatic pleural form of systemic
lupus
erythematodes with late clinical outbreak. The fascinating pathogenetic, clinical, biological and therapeutic resemblances between the present syndrome and the post-infarctual syndrome of Dressler and Johnson's post-pericardiotomic syndrome are pointed out and it is suggested that complications of medical nature already described as being secondary to the installation of pacemakers, such as
endocarditis
and pericarditis, should be looked at from an autoimmune type of pathogenetic viewpoint. Finally, in the light of personal observations, the need for immunological study of high risk patients, namely relations of patients with autoimmune diseases, is stressed. All candidates for pacemaker installation should also be included. Routine screening of this type would take on enormous practical importance as it would enable preventive or curative treatment to be undertaken to modify the immunitary balance of those subjects in whom pacemaker installation is liable to trigger off critical, irreversible breakdown in immunitary homoeostasis of which the syndrome in question would seem to be the most dramatic, but perhaps no the only, clinical manifestation.
...
PMID:[On a syndrome of immunopathic type with pleural and systemic localization observed in patients with intracavitary electrostimulators. Considerations on 4 cases]. 96 39
A 25-year-old woman with active systemic lupus erythematosus and infective
endocarditis
was seen initially with porcine aortic bioprosthetic stenosis, perivalvar regurgitation, and native mitral regurgitation 9 years after aortic valve replacement for
lupus
endocarditis
. Double-valve replacement was performed with St. Jude Medical mechanical prostheses. After operation the patient developed fever and an elevated white blood cell count. One month later she had increasing mitral and aortic perivalvular regurgitation and intermittent complete heart block. At reoperation both annuli showed evidence of continued infection, and she underwent annular reconstructions with pericardium and double-valve re-replacement. Cultures grew Mycoplasma hominis. Despite long-term therapy with appropriate antibiotics, within 2 months she developed recurrent perivalvar regurgitation with congestive heart failure. Orthotopic heart transplantation was performed. The postoperative course was notable for significant leukocytosis and spontaneous culture negative hemothorax that required thoracotomy for drainage. The patient recovered and is now well 14 months after operation.
...
PMID:Heart transplantation for intractable prosthetic valve endocarditis. 231 73
Cerebral ischemia is very rare in children and young adults. There can be a multitude of causes; in many cases etiology remains undetermined. We report here on 7 cases, 11 to 25 years of age. Pathogenetic factors (
lupus
erythematodes,
endocarditis
, fibromuscular dysplasia) and risk factors (cigarette smoking, oral contraceptives) were found in 5 patients whereas in 2 cases the etiology was not determinable. Three patients were treated with low weight dextrans, two patients received prostaglandin E1, and in 2 cases regional thrombolysis was performed. Three female patients died, two with occlusions of the rostral part of the basilar artery and one with an occlusion of the carotid artery and
lupus
erythematodes as the primary disease. Long-term observations of the surviving patients showed good recovery from neurological deficits. Prognosis quoad sanationem seems better in this age group than in elderly patients.
...
PMID:Cerebral ischemia in children and young adults. 245 51
Two young women (aged 32 and 25 years) with systemic lupus erythematosus and heart valve lesions in association with antiphospholipid antibodies are presented. In addition to the presence of the '
lupus
anticoagulant' and false positive Venereal Disease Research Laboratory (VDRL) tests, both patients had high levels of IgG anticardiolipin antibodies. The first patient additionally had contraceptive induced chorea, chorea gravidarum, seven miscarriages, livedo reticularis, pulmonary embolism, and thrombocytopenia and developed culture negative
endocarditis
as well as hypertension. The second patient, who had presented with hypertension, developed aortic and mitral regurgitation, suspected myocarditis, manifested transient ischaemic attacks, and responded well to anticoagulation and steroid treatment.
...
PMID:Diagnostic and therapeutic problems in two patients with antiphospholipid antibodies, heart valve lesions, and transient ischaemic attacks. 314 42
We performed echocardiography prospectively 4.9 +/- 0.7 years apart (mean +/- SD), in 74 patients with systemic lupus erythematosus. On the basis of the first study, the patients were distributed in four groups according to the type of valvular involvement: 7 patients had vegetations (Libman-Sacks endocarditis; group 1); 6 patients had rigid and thickened valves with stenosis, regurgitation, or both (group 2); 5 patients had miscellaneous forms of valvular involvement without valvular dysfunction (group 3), as did the 60 controls; and 56 patients had no valvular disease (group 4). The overall prevalence of clinically important valvular disease (groups 1 and 2) was 18 percent. Patients in group 1 were younger than those in group 2 (33.5 +/- 16.7 vs. 47.8 +/- 17.6 years; P less than 0.05), had a shorter mean duration of
lupus
(4.8 +/- 2.2 vs. 10.7 +/- 6.4 years; P less than 0.001), and had received a smaller cumulative dose of steroids (21.5 +/- 13.1 vs. 79.5 +/- 63.4 g of methylprednisolone or its equivalent; P less than 0.05). During the five-year follow-up, one patient in group 1 and five in group 2 required valve surgery, no patient in group 3 had valvular dysfunction, and five patients in group 4 had mild valvular lesions. We conclude that clinically important valvular involvement in systemic
lupus
is relatively frequent and sometimes requires surgery. Echocardiography can identify a subset of lesions (valvular thickening and dysfunction), other than verrucous (Libman-Sacks)
endocarditis
, that are prone to hemodynamic deterioration.
...
PMID:Prevalence, morphologic types, and evolution of cardiac valvular disease in systemic lupus erythematosus. 341 13
A 30 year old man presenting with a 10 year history of delayed pressure urticaria had a secondary
lupus
-induced double mitral and aortic regurgitation which necessitated double valve replacement within 2 years. The anatomical appearances of the valvular lesions were very unusual and suggest a new anatomo-clinical form of the classical Libman-Sacks endocarditis. In addition to infective
endocarditis
, systemic lupus erythematosus may also lead to valvular lesions necessitating valve replacement. The association of S.L.E. and delayed urticaria is rare, and also merits publication.
...
PMID:[Double valve replacement in a 30-year-old man with acute systemic lupus erythematosus]. 357 90
SLE affects most aspects of cardiac function, and recent studies have reported increasing cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. Pathologically, SLE is characterized by a pancarditis involving pericardium, myocardium, endocardium, and coronary arteries. In autopsy series, pericarditis has been found in 43% to 100% (mean 62%, Table I), and myocarditis was found in 8% to 78% (mean 40%, Table II), but both have been underdiagnosed clinically. Libman-Sacks lesions have been noted in 25% to 100% (mean 43%) and infective
endocarditis
in 1.1% to 4.9% of clinical and autopsy studies (Table III). Coronary disease may be due to arteritis, which should be treated with high-dose steroids, or it may be due to atherosclerosis, which is amenable to medical or surgical therapy. Valvular disease has been treated surgically, but with a combined surgical mortality as high as 25%. Aortic insufficiency and mitral regurgitation are the most common valvular problems, although aortic and mitral stenosis have also been reported. Hypertension has been noted in 14% to 69%, and heart failure in 5% to 44%. Evidence for a
lupus
cardiomyopathy, which may be subclinical, is reviewed. While steroids may ameliorate SLE pancarditis, they have also been associated with hypertension, LV hypertrophy, purulent and constrictive pericarditis, mitral regurgitation, and perhaps accelerated atherosclerosis. It remains to be seen if improved diagnosis and treatment of the cardiovascular manifestations of SLE can enhance survival.
...
PMID:Cardiovascular manifestations of systemic lupus erythematosus. 390 17
Four cases of
endocarditis
due to Kingella kingae are described in compromised patients. All had primary heart disease, and two had systemic
lupus
erythematosis and congenital heart defect respectively, in addition. Confirmation of Kingella kingae was made in one case at autopsy. The literature on 11 cases of
endocarditis
, 2 bacteremia, 4 osteomyelitis, 5 septic arthritis and 1 intervertebral disc infection, all caused by Kingella kingae, is reviewed. Our findings confirm that the organism is of low pathogenicity. Children may be predisposed to infection with Kingella kingae.
...
PMID:Endocarditis due to Kingella kingae. 646 70
To evaluate the diagnostic help afforded by immune determinations in feverish valvular patients, we prospectively determined: total hemolytic complement, cryoglobulin, rheumatoid factor, circulating immune complexes and direct skin immunofluorescence. Twenty patients entered the study, twelve with bacterial endocarditis, six without any bacteremia and two septicemic patients without
endocarditis
. We detected at least one immune abnormality in 10/12
endocarditis
patients: - in 7/11 (64 p. cent) circulating immune complexes; - in 3/12 rheumatoid factor; - in 3/12 positive fluorescence in dermal vessels (IgM-C3); - and in one patient an IgG
lupus
-like band in the membrane basal zone. We also found circulating immune complexes in 3/4 patients without bacteremia and in 1/2 septicemic patients. We conclude that, in our small prospective study, immune abnormalities are frequent in bacterial endocarditis patients but their diagnostic values is rather limited : their absence do not rule out
endocarditis
and they can be present in many other febrile disorders.
...
PMID:[Bacterial endocarditis : lack of diagnostic value of immunological investigations (author's transl)]. 708 72
A retrospective study of 112 cases of lupus erythematosus, 103 acute disseminated lupus erythematosus (ADLE) and 9 chronic discoid
lupus
(CDL), was conducted to determine the incidence of disorders of conduction (DC), and to study their prognosis and discuss their pathogenicity. The mean age of the group was 38 +/- 16 years, and the mean follow-up period after discovery of the DC was 53 months. Cardiac lesions were present in 49.5 p. cent of the 103 patients with ADLE : pericarditis in 27 p. cent, murmur from
lupus
endocarditis
or cardiomyopathy in 23 p. cent, heart failure in 4.8 p. cent, and hypertension in 17 p. cent. Disorders of conduction were present in 18 (17.5 p. cent) of the 112 patients studied. These included 5 partial right bundle-branch blocks (no complete right bundle-branch block), 2 complete and 3 partial left bundle-branch blocks, 5 complete, 2 first degree, and 1 second degree atrioventricular blocks (AVB). The atrioventricular blocks were usually located in the truncal or fascicular regions, but in 2 cases they were nodal in origin. The 5 complete AVB were associated with ADLE in two cases and CDL in the three other cases. The AVB in the ADLE cases appeared 9 to 20 years after the onset of the
lupus
, these two patients developing pericardiomyocarditis unaccompanied by disorders of conduction. The three complete AVB occurring during CDL were detected 9 to 18 months after the diagnosis. A fatal outcome was noted in 13 (12.5 p. cent) of the ADLE patients and one of the 9 cases of CDL. Ten-year survival curves showed no difference in prognosis for the groups with or without disorders of conduction, but mortality increased in patients with DC after 10 years. As disorders of conduction were more frequently observed in patients with
lupus
than in a control population, they can be attributed to either a
lupus
myocarditis or prolonged administration of synthetic antimalarial agents. Disorders of conduction, and particularly complete AVB are, in fact, observed in patients without pericardiomyocardial lesions, and when they exist usually develop a long time after the onset of the cardiac lesion. All patients had been treated with antimalarials, however, and the onset of the DC was associated with a chloroquine myopathy in some of them. Three of the five complete AVB were observed during the course of CDL in patients without cardiac lesions, this being a supplementary argument for implicating synthetic antimalarials.
...
PMID:[Disorders of conduction in lupus erythematosus : frequency and incidence in a group of 112 patients (author's transl)]. 730 72
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