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Query: UMLS:C0014118 (
endocarditis
)
15,629
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The nervous system is frequently involved in patients with infective
endocarditis
. When a careful review of presenting complaints is undertaken, neurological symptoms have been found in as high as 29% of patients. Because these manifestations may be so protean in nature, for example, stroke or transient ischaemic attack (the most common), toxic encephalopathy,
meningitis
, brain abscess, visual loss, seizures, headache, backache, or acute mononeuropathy, the neurologist needs to consider infective
endocarditis
as a possible diagnosis in many patients. During the past two decades, infective
endocarditis
has occurred in an ever widening clinical setting. It may often be found in persons unknown to have predisposing cardiac disease. This is particularly true in certain subsets of the population, including the elderly, patients subjected to various invasive procedures leading to nosocomial infection, and drug abusers. New diagnostic studies, including refined bacteriological culture techniques, echocardiography, computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging, and greater availability of skillful cerebral angiography, make earlier diagnosis of infective
endocarditis
possible. Despite this, patients with neurological complications continue to have an uncertain prognosis.
...
PMID:Neurological manifestations of infective endocarditis. Review of clinical and therapeutic challenges. 267 68
A patient with antecedent coccidioidal pulmonary cavitary disease who developed an empyema due to Kingella kingae prompted our analysis of the literature regarding this unusual bacterial pathogen. Formerly classified among other genera and considered a nonpathogen, K. kingae has been increasingly recognized as a cause of human infection. While the most commonly diagnosed infections due to this organism are
endocarditis
and septic arthritis, there have also been isolated reports of bacteremia, diskitis, abscesses,
meningitis
, and oropharyngeal infections. The treatment of choice is penicillin, to which K. kingae strains are uniformly susceptible. Recognition of the potential pathogenicity of this microorganism in appropriate clinical settings will probably result in more prompt and specific therapy.
...
PMID:Clinical manifestations of Kingella kingae infections: case report and review. 268 50
A 69-year old man with clinically silent mitral valve prolapse developed infective
endocarditis
secondary to Eikenella corrodens after dental work. The patient required surgical removal of abscessed teeth and long-term antibiotic therapy. E. corrodens is a gram-negative coccobacillus which normally inhabits the oropharynx, gastrointestinal tract, and upper respiratory tract. The organism can cause cutaneous and abdominal abscesses,
meningitis
, osteomyelitis, and
endocarditis
. Patients with mitral valve prolapse and a pre-existent systolic murmur or Doppler echocardiographic evidence of mitral regurgitation should receive prophylactic antibiotics for any procedure associated with a bacteremia. An infection caused by E. corrodens should be considered in patients with fever after dental manipulation or in patients with "culture-negative"
endocarditis
.
...
PMID:Eikenella corrodens: an unusual cause of endocarditis in a patient with silent mitral valve prolapse. 269 71
Streptococcus pneumoniae is an important pathogen in many serious infections, such as pneumonia, sinusitis, and
meningitis
. It uncommonly causes infective
endocarditis
and only rarely produces spinal epidural abscesses. This report describes a patient who had pneumococcal infection presenting as an acute epidural abscess and who was subsequently found to have
endocarditis
. S. pneumoniae was cultured from both blood and abscess material. A high level of clinical suspicion of
endocarditis
is important in all cases of bacteremic pneumococcal illness; patients with such an illness and back pain may harbor potentially catastrophic epidural abscesses.
...
PMID:Streptococcus pneumoniae endocarditis presenting as an epidural abscess. 270 29
Streptobacillus moniliformis is an uncommon human pathogen contracted from exposure to rodents. It usually produces a mild, protracted illness (rat-bite fever, Haverhill fever, erythema arthriticum epidemicum) that has either a favorable response to antibiotic therapy or spontaneously resolves. This report describes a fatal case of Streptobacillus moniliformis in an infant bitten by a wild rat. The autopsy findings included an interstitial pneumonia, fibrinous
endocarditis
, mild mononuclear
meningitis
, hepatosplenomegaly and lymphadenopathy, erythrophagocytosis, and sinusoidal mononuclear cell infiltrates in regional lymph nodes and the liver. To the authors' knowledge, this is the first report of the autopsy pathology findings of this agent.
...
PMID:Fatal Streptobacillus moniliformis infection in a two-month-old infant. 271 62
We reviewed the clinical and laboratory presentation of Haemophilus species bacteremia at our institution, with special attention to predisposing and prognostic factors. Of 36 cases, 18 presented with pneumonia, 1 with cellulitis, and another with sinusitis. No cases of
meningitis
or
endocarditis
were detected. Most episodes were caused by Haemophilus influenzae, and the overall response rate to treatment was 72%. Factors including chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, alcoholism, prior splenectomy, and neutropenia did not play an important role in these patients' infections. Most of the isolates serotyped were found to be nontypable. The occurrence of ampicillin resistance was 6% throughout the study. Ampicillin, chloramphenicol, and second-generation cephalosporins were all effective therapeutic regimens. Bacteremia due to Haemophilus species remains an uncommon infection in patients with cancer, despite the predominance of traditional predisposing factors.
...
PMID:Haemophilus species bacteremia in patients with cancer. A 13-year experience. 273 Feb 52
Neisseria sicca, although considered a harmless saprophyte, has been recognised as an etiologic agent in three cases of pneumonitis, and rare cases of
endocarditis
,
meningitis
, and osteomyelitis, particularly in immunocompromised hosts. We report the case of a 76-year-old man with a community-acquired pneumonia, in whom both sputum samples and bronchial secretions obtained with bronchoscopic protected catheter brush grew pure culture of N. sicca with abundant polymorphonuclear neutrophils. Dramatic clinical improvement only occurred after initiation of an appropriate antibiotherapy according to susceptibility spectrum of the isolated N. sicca. Bronchiectasis underlying lesions were disclosed by computed tomography. N. sicca should be added to the list of commensal organisms able to cause pulmonary infection. Moreover, the association of N. sicca and bronchiectasis has never been published.
...
PMID:Neisseria sicca pneumonia and bronchiectasis. 277 75
Twenty-eight patients of cyanotic congenital heart disease (CHD) complicated with brain abscess were reviewed. There were 22 males and 6 females with a mean age of 9.1 +/- 5.5 years. Tetralogy of Fallot was the commonest cyanotic CHD observed. Transposition of great arteries (PS), tricuspid atresia with VSD, PS and double outlet right ventricle with VSD comprised 25% of the cardiac lesions. Febrile illness was the commonest mode of presentation (42.86%). Frontal lobe was the commonest site of abscess localization (37.5%) followed by parietal lobe (32.5%). Multiple abscess were seen in 32.14% and in 35.7% the pus was sterile on culture. Twelve patients died (mortality -42.8%), and autopsy reports were available in 6. Infective endocarditis was suspected in 7 on clinical grounds, while at autopsy, out of 6 only 2 had evidence of right-sided
endocarditis
. There was no correlation of mortality with age, sex, type of micro-organism, site of abscess localization and the nature of heart disease. Multiple abscesses, features of raised intracranial tension and associated
meningitis
/ventriculitis predicted a grim outcome.
...
PMID:Brain abscess in cyanotic congenital heart disease. 277 3
Fourteen patients with serious infections caused by Staphylococcus aureus and other gram-positive bacteria were prospectively treated with chromatographically purified vancomycin in an open-label, nonrandomized study, between December 1986 and June 1987. Five patients were excluded from the evaluation of efficacy. Among the nine evaluable patients, cure was achieved in six patients--a success rate of 67%. One patient had a relapse of osteomyelitis, and cultures of draining pus were positive for oxacillin-resistant S aureus within three weeks after the discontinuation of vancomycin therapy. One patient failed to respond to vancomycin therapy for S aureus-induced
endocarditis
,
meningitis
, and osteomyelitis; in another patient, the treatment failed to reverse the course of S aureus septicemia. No serious drug toxicity, for example, nephrotoxicity, was encountered in any patient. One patient (7%) experienced mild ototoxicity. Four patients (29%) had mild phlebitis, two patients (14%) had a transiently positive Coombs' test, and one patient (7%) had a "red neck syndrome" and "pain and spasm syndrome." Chromatographically purified vancomycin is an effective antibiotic in the treatment of serious infections caused by susceptible gram-positive bacteria. Some minor side effects of vancomycin may not be due to impurities in the preparation but rather to the vancomycin itself.
...
PMID:Chromatographically purified vancomycin: therapy of serious infections caused by Staphylococcus aureus and other gram-positive bacteria. 285
A year-long outbreak of multiresistant Escherichia coli K52 H1, predominantly serogroup O15, is reported from south east London. Most patients had urinary tract infections, some with septicaemia; but some cases of septicaemia were associated with pneumonia,
meningitis
, and
endocarditis
--unusual infections for E coli. 3 of these patients died. The organism was acquired in the community, and its source is still being investigated.
...
PMID:Epidemic multiresistant Escherichia coli infection in West Lambeth Health District. 289 79
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