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

Eighty-three noninstitutionalized patients with Down's syndrome, aged 9 to 55 years, were randomly selected to receive echocardiograms. Forty-one patients had echocardiographic findings indicative of mitral valve prolapse, and 15 of these patients lacked associated auscultatory findings. Because mitral valve prolapse can predispose patients to bacterial endocarditis after bacteremia-producing dental procedures, these findings suggest that if auscultatory findings alone are used, a significant number of patients with Down's syndrome who are at risk for endocarditis may not be currently identified in the course of routine clinical practice.
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PMID:The prevalence of mitral valve prolapse in patients with Down's syndrome: implications for dental management. 297 85

The gross criteria for diagnosing prolapsing mitral valve are: 1. interchordal hooding of the involved leaflets, 2. hooding or doming of leaflets towards the left atrium, 3. elongation of the involved leaflets resulting in an increase in valve area, 4. dilatation of the valve annulus in patients with severe mitral regurgitation. The posterior leaflet is most frequently affected. The involved leaflets, in general, are thickened, soft, greyish white and have a smooth atrial surface. Chordae tendineae are described as elongated, tortuous and attenuated or thinned. Deviations from normal chordal insertion have recently been observed which possibly appear to represent the underlying abnormality. Microscopic findings include significant thickening of the spongiosa and the fibrosa, changes in dense collagen fibers in the atrialis layer, occasionally, with fibrin platelet deposits. Histochemical characterization of changes in the spongiosa may also be helpful in the diagnosis. Ultrastructurally, there may be changes in collagen and elastic fibers as well as myxoid areas. On comparison of findings in surgically-removed mitral valves with those of control specimens from autopsy patients with no cardiac abnormalities, the length of the anterior and posterior leaflet as well as the annular ring diameter was larger in the valves with prolapse. Two-dimensional echocardiography accurately assessed leaflet length when compared to morphologic measurements, however, the annular diameter during systole or diastole was smaller. In patients with mitral regurgitation requiring surgery, mitral valve prolapse is the most common cause. Annular ring dilatation and chordae tendineae rupture appear to contribute substantially to incurrence of the mitral regurgitation. The heart weight is increased in the majority of patients with symptomatic mitral valve prolapse but normal, however, in those without symptoms. The most frequent complication of mitral valve prolapse is mitral regurgitation with or without congestive heart failure. Patients with redundant leaflets may be at high risk of sudden death. Young women with abnormal resting ECG, prolonged Q-T interval, family history of sudden death or complex ventricular arrhythmias may also be at a greater risk of sudden death. The incidence of infective endocarditis appears higher in those with redundant than in those with nonredundant valves. The incidence of cerebral ischemic events is low.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:The pathology of mitral valve prolapse. 304 84

The discrepancies reported in various studies with respect to long-term prognosis in mitral valve prolapse can be attributed to the criteria employed for diagnosis and to the differing patient populations studied. Furthermore, mitral valve prolapse is not a single, well-defined disease but reflects rather a broad spectrum of a disease process. Echocardiographically, patients can be identified with redundant, thickened leaflets with excessive mitral valve motion and prolapse as well as those with normal appearing leaflets but systolic prolapse representative of differing disease processes with differing prognosis. The incidence of sudden cardiac death is estimated at a low value of 1.9/10,000 patients per year. In the presence of a normal resting ECG, with no hemodynamically-meaningful mitral regurgitation and no evidence of redundant mitral leaflets the risk is even less. Cerebral embolic events occur with an estimated incidence of 1/6000 patients per year, similarly low; it can be assumed that patients with very myxomatous, redundant mitral leaflets have the highest risk. The incidence of infective endocarditis is also low, estimated at 1/5725 patients per year (0.175%). Risk factors for complications include: a systolic murmur, advanced age, male sex and leaflet redundancy. The most important complication is mitral regurgitation for which the incidence is highest in older men and in the presence of left ventricular, dilatation.
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PMID:Follow-up observations in patients with mitral valve prolapse. 305 85

Idiopathic mitral valve prolapse, also called Barlow's disease, has been estimated to affect 5 p. 100 of the general population. Normally a benign disease, it becomes life-threatening in only a very small number of cases. High risk subjects could be detected by simple TM-mode echocardiography, provided this examination is of good quality and reproducible, for it shows a 5 mm or more thickening of mitral leaflets. Should this be the case, according to the Mayo Clinic authors, serious complications, such as sudden death, infective endocarditis or ischaemic cerebral vascular accidents, would be expected to occur in 10 p. 100 of the patients. Sudden death, of which only 60 cases have been published, is exceptional; it mainly concerns young subjects (mean age 40 years), predominantly women, with a family history of sudden death, who have experienced one or several syncopes and present with severe per- or intercritical dysrhythmias. Such subjects must be regularly supervised clinically as well as by basal or ambulatory electrocardiography and, if necessary, by electrophysiological or even haemodynamic exploration. Treatment with appropriate beta-blockers or antiarrhythmic agents is often required as is, in refractory cases, implantation of an automatic defibrillator. Infective endocarditis is a cause of death in 10 to 20 p. 100 of the patients. It mainly threatens subjects whose mitral valve regurgitation is suspected on the presence of a holo- or end-systolic murmur and confirmed by Doppler echocardiography.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Barlow's disease and risk for life]. 313 Aug 21

Atrial septal aneurysm can be detected by subcostal echocardiography as a bulge of the intermediate interatrial septum, ballooning toward the right atrium. We retrospectively revised 5412 echo examinations, consecutively performed in our laboratory, and we found 14 cases of atrial septal aneurysm (0.26%), mean age 36 +/- 15 years, 9 males and 5 females. In 7 patients atrial septal aneurysm was wide, including the whole atrial septum; in 5, only cranial two-thirds of the septum were involved and in 2, it regarded only the intermediate septum. No patients referred to arrhythmias, syncope, embolism, endocarditis or transient ischemic neurologic disorders. Cardiac abnormalities or defects were associated to atrial septal aneurysm in 12/14 patients: they consisted of atrial septal defect, mitral valve prolapse, false ventricular tendons or persistent Chiari network. Atrial left-to-right shunt was detected in all 6 cases with atrial communication. Considering each single associated cardiac abnormality, the prevalence of atrial septal aneurysm was 7% in patients with atrial septal defect, 1.7% in those with mitral valve prolapse, 6.6% in persistent Chiari network and 0.9% in false ventricular tendons. In conclusion, echocardiography is the first-choice technique to detect atrial septal aneurysm and other related cardiac defects.
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PMID:[Echography in aneurysm of the interatrial septum]. 326 51

Although group B streptococci frequently colonize the birth canal of pregnant women, and cause puerperal sepsis in approximately 0.2% of deliveries, recommendations for endocarditis prophylaxis do not include uncomplicated vaginal delivery. Mitral valve prolapse has been reported to represent a low risk for endocarditis and an uncertain risk/benefit ratio for prophylaxis. As the case presented here illustrates, group B streptococcal endocarditis after uncomplicated vaginal delivery can be associated with mitral valve prolapse; patients with additional risk factors for group B streptococcal infection are at particular risk.
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PMID:Postpartum group B streptococcal endocarditis associated with mitral valve prolapse. 330 6

Mitral valve prolapse is a common mitral valve disorder manifested clinically as a midsystolic click and/or a late systolic murmur (the click-murmur syndrome) and pathologically as billowing or prolapsing mitral leaflets (the floppy valve syndrome). Not only is it one of the two most common congenital heart diseases and the most common valve disorder diagnosed in the United States, but it is also prevalent throughout the world. Mitral valve prolapse may be associated with a variety of other conditions or diseases. Diagnosis of mitral valve prolapse should be made on clinical grounds and, if necessary, supported by echocardiography. The majority of patients with mitral valve prolapse suffer no serious sequelae. However, major complications such as disabling angina-like chest pains, progressive mitral regurgitation, infective endocarditis, thromboembolism, serious arrhythmias, and sudden death may occur. Unless these serious complications occur, most of the patients with mitral valve prolapse need no treatment other than reassurance, including those with atypical chest pain or palpitation unconfirmed by objective data. Therapy with a beta-blocker for disabling chest pain and/or arrhythmias and antiplatelet therapy for cerebral embolic events may be indicated. In occasional patients with significant mitral regurgitation surgery may be necessary.
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PMID:Mitral valve prolapse. 330 81

The American Heart Association's recommendations for the prevention of infective endocarditis were first published in February, 1955, and the most recent (fifth revision) in December, 1984. The somewhat controversial nature of these recommendations reflects several issues, including the degree to which infective endocarditis in man is preventable and the relative safety of alternative regimens. Nevertheless, it is apparent that a reasonable fraction of cases are preventable and that antibiotics for this purpose are appropriate. It is also clear that certain patient groups, i.e. those with prosthetic valves or surgically constructed systemic-pulmonary shunts, are at greatest risk and warrant more intensive, primarily parenteral antibiotic regimens. Particularly controversial are recommendations related to the very large group of patients with mitral valve prolapse. The latest American Heart Association recommendations are presented in detail.
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PMID:Prevention of infective endocarditis: the view from the United States. 331 56

It is not easy to evaluate the prognosis of mitral valve prolapse. First of all, a positive diagnosis is difficult: the clinical insufficiencies are ill-compensated by sonocardiography as it is less reliable than expected; the very existence of the "mitral valve prolapse" described by Barlow is being challenged. Secondly, the most severe complications of mitral prolapse are rare, with respect to its frequency. Some complications are currently well defined. Thus, severe mitral insufficiency, leading to valve replacement, affects elderly men more than young women, although the pathological lesions correspond to the same disease. Endocarditis is rare and only occurs when there is an audible murmur. Rhythm disorders are varied, with however, frequent junction tachycardias and a marked influence of catecholamines, which may explain the clinical effectiveness of beta-blockers. Unfortunately, severe complications are not as well known. Thus, the risk of sudden death and cerebral vascular accident cannot be figured out from large statistical studies. Only studies of some so called "risk" sub-groups, should allow a better knowledge of these two complications and a more effective prevention.
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PMID:[Evaluation of the prognosis of mitral valve prolapse]. 332 56

A survey of infective endocarditis in the North East Thames Regional Health Authority was carried out over a period of 30 months from 1982 to 1984. The incidence, clinical characteristics, and in-hospital mortality were studied. Important causes of endocarditis were dental treatment, the presence of dental disease, drug abuse, and cytoscopy. The omission or incorrect administration of antibiotic prophylaxis in patients with valve disease was noted, but failure of correctly prescribed antibiotic prophylaxis was not recorded. Adverse prognostic features were increased age, prosthetic valve infection, Gram negative or staphylococcal infections, and aortic valve involvement. In contrast, mortality was lower in patients with mitral valve prolapse, ventricular septal defect, and streptococcus viridans infection. Deaths were usually attributable to irreversible complications present at the time of diagnosis. Vegetations were detected on the echocardiogram in half of those studied and mortality was higher in those with vegetations than without. Operation for native valve infection was associated with a low mortality and it is likely that the overall mortality for infective endocarditis has been improved by surgical intervention.
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PMID:Infective endocarditis: incidence and mortality in the North East Thames Region. 334 51


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