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Query: UMLS:C0014118 (
endocarditis
)
15,629
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Tricuspid regurgitation developed in two patients after inferior wall
myocardial infarction
. Neither patient had preexisting valvular heart disease or evidence of
endocarditis
, and neither had suffered chest trauma. Because abnormalities in right ventricular function may occur after inferior infarction, and because other known causes of tricuspid incompetence were not present, we postulate that these patients developed valvular regurgitation from dysfunction of the papillary muscle complex controlling tricuspid valve function, a mechanism similar to that proposed to explain mitral regurgitation seen with inferior wall ischemia.
...
PMID:Tricuspid regurgitation following inferior myocardial infarction. 124 43
A 25 year old female with bicuspid aortic valve and aortic stenosis developed infectious endocarditis due to beta hemolytic streptococcus. Specific antibiotic therapy was not successful, the patient developed multiple embolic episodes and platelet dysfunction that prevented surgery. The patient died 5 weeks after admission. Necropsy showed aortic annulo-ectasia, cystic medial necrosis and localized dissection of the proximal aorta. There were multiple aortic valve vegetations and evidence of inflammatory myocardial involvement, coronary embolization and
myocardial infarction
. Aortic annulo-ectasia should be investigated in patients with aortic valve
endocarditis
and early surgery would be advised to prevent aortic dissection.
...
PMID:[Fatal infectious endocarditis in a patient with annulo-aortic ectasia and predominant bicuspid valve aortic stenosis. Anatomoclinical case]. 130 14
Thirty-three cases of infective
endocarditis
presenting during a 6.5 year period to a district general hospital were analysed retrospectively. The annual incidence was 22 cases per million population. Twenty-two cases had pre-existing cardiac disease, mainly valvular disease-usually rheumatic (nine cases) and prosthetic valves (10 cases). Recognizable precipitants such as recent surgery were uncommon. Two cases presented after deliberate drug overdose possibly due to depression exacerbated by systemic disease. Symptoms were usually non-specific. All but two cases had murmurs and most were pyrexial. Splinter haemorrhages and clubbing were seen in about 20% of cases. Viridans-type streptococci were the commonest infecting organisms (14 cases). Staphylococcal infection (six cases) was confined to intravenous drug abusers and patients with prosthetic valves. Five cases were culture negative. Cardiac failure was present in 13 cases at presentation and developed in seven others during treatment. Acute valve replacement was necessary in eight cases, and late replacement in three. Renal impairment (plasma urea > 8 mmol/l and/or plasma creatinine > 120 mumol/l) occurred in 19 cases during the course of their illness. Embolic phenomena occurred in 12 patients and mostly involved the central nervous system. In the 8 fatal cases, the cause of death was cardiac failure in six, cerebrovascular accident in one, and
myocardial infarction
in one. Four of the six patients who subsequently died of cardiac failure had been referred for surgery. Both those who were not referred had coexisting medical problems. Factors associated with increased mortality were age, male sex, cardiac failure (P < 0.01), renal impairment (P < 0.05), and embolic phenomena (P < 0.01).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Infective endocarditis in a district general hospital. 143 86
Based on the clinical, instrumental and biochemical findings, out of 104 patients with septic
endocarditis
11 (10.6%) were diagnosed to have
myocardial infarction
. It was provoked by coronary artery embolism, the covering of the coronary artery ostium by vegetation from the aortal cusp, a decrease of perfusion pressure in atherosclerosis stenosed coronary arteries because of marked insufficiency of the aortal cusp. In more than half the cases, the clinical picture of
myocardial infarction
was atypical, painless. Echocardiographic demonstration of the vegetations near the coronary artery ostium permits forecasting the possibility of its covering with vegetation, the threat of the occurrence of acute coronary insufficiency, which may appear an additional indication for heart valve replacement.
...
PMID:[The mechanisms of the development and diagnosis of myocardial infarct in septic endocarditis]. 144 Mar 11
The antiphospholipid syndrome has been associated with multiple cardiac abnormalities. The earliest reports were of valvular disease, including verrucous
endocarditis
, as well as valvular thickening and insufficiency. Subsequently, antiphospholipid antibodies were implicated in coronary artery disease manifested by premature
myocardial infarction
and coronary artery bypass graft occlusion. In addition, there have been rare reports of intracardiac thrombi and diffuse cardiomyopathy in association with antiphospholipid antibodies. In this review, we discuss the nature and prevalence of the cardiac manifestations of the antiphospholipid antibody syndrome as well as some of the proposed pathophysiologic mechanisms. We also provide examples from our own experience. The expanding spectrum of cardiac disease associated with antiphospholipid antibodies suggests an important role for these antibodies in certain types of cardiac pathology.
...
PMID:Cardiac manifestations of the antiphospholipid syndrome. 144 4
Twenty eight patients with native valve
endocarditis
(NVE) were subjected to this study. Thirteen patients underwent an operation at the chronic phase, and 15 patients at the active phase. One of the 13 patients at the chronic phase died of cardiac rupture due to
myocardial infarction
which had occurred preoperatively, and one of 10 patients at active phase without annular infection died of rupture of mycotic cerebral aneurysm early postoperatively. Among 5 patients at the active phase with annular infection, prosthetic valve
endocarditis
occurred in one patient 1.5 months after supraannular aortic valve replacement, and the second operation with a translocation technique was needed. This patient was lost from low output syndrome. Another patient in this group, who underwent a translocation technique because of mycotic annular abscess, died of intestinal infarction late postoperatively. The other 24 patients went a good postoperative course. Five patients with annular infection at the active phase had a shorter duration from the infectious onset to operation (20 days to 2 months, average 38 days), and the causative microorganisms were streptococcus faecalis, staphylococcus epidermidis and gram-negative coccus. One patient, who died of mycotic cerebral aneurysmal rupture, had candida albicans as a causative microorganism. For patients with NVE, an early aggressive operation is essential before infection extends to the annulus or to other vital organs, especially when these microorganisms are identified.
...
PMID:[Surgical treatment of native valve endocarditis]. 150 96
Following a case of cardiac tamponade in a patient with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), we examined the frequency and clinical spectrum of pericardial effusions associated with human immunodeficiency virus infection (HIV) at our institution. Of 187 hospitalized patients documented to have pericardial effusions over a one-year period, 14 (7 percent) were known to be HIV-positive at the time of their echocardiograms. One patient presented with a large effusion and cardiac tamponade, three had moderate effusions, and ten had small effusions. The probable effusion etiology was established in four cases and included
endocarditis
(2), lymphoma (1), and
myocardial infarction
(1). In hospital mortality was 29 percent (4 of 14). From our study, as well as a growing number of reports in the literature, we conclude that HIV-associated pericardial effusions are frequently seen and that their clinical spectrum is broad.
...
PMID:HIV-associated pericardial effusions. 151 33
Recommendations for the prophylaxis of infective
endocarditis
have been published by working groups in several countries. We performed an enquiry amongst 276 dentists in Geneva to evaluate how the Swiss recommendations were applied. Of the 183 dentists who answered, the majority knew that extraction (85%) or scaling (76%) required prophylaxis. They correctly prescribed antibiotics to patients with valve prostheses (84%), to those with rheumatic heart disease (80%), a previous history of
endocarditis
(73%) or congenital heart disease (49%). Not conforming to the recommendations, many dentists considered that coronary bypass surgery (40%), mitral valve prolapse without mitral regurgitation (30%) or previous
myocardial infarction
(22%) also required antibiotic prophylaxis. Only 34% of dentists used the recommended 3 g of amoxicillina, the others preferring a lower dose of another antibiotic. About one third started prophylaxis 1 to 3 days too early and less than 20% used the suggested single dose of antibiotics. These results showed that dentists caring for cardiac patients should be better informed of the risks of
endocarditis
and its prevention. We make a few suggestions to improve antibiotic prophylaxis.
...
PMID:[Do dentists enforce correctly the recommendations for prophylaxis of bacterial endocarditis?]. 156 27
Endocarditis
by Aspergillus species in patients without prior cardiovascular surgery is extremely rare and difficult to diagnose. We report and discuss a 69-year-old patient with hairy cell leukemia who developed severe bilateral pneumonia and metastatic subcutaneous nodules from which A. fumigatus was cultured. He died after 18 days of treatment with an adequate dose (0.7 mg/kg/day) of amphotericin B intravenously. Fungal endocarditis and a
myocardial infarction
due to a septic thrombotic occlusion of the left coronary artery by A. fumigatus appeared to be the cause of death. A. fumigatus could still be cultured from the aortic valve postmortem despite a total dose of 756 mg amphotericin B. In case of metastatic spread of Aspergillus spp.,
endocarditis
should be suspected.
...
PMID:Aspergillus fumigatus, a rare cause of fatal coronary artery occlusion. 156 13
Cardiac disorders associated with cerebral embolism including cardiac surgery,
myocardial infarction
,
endocarditis
and non-valvular atrial fibrillation (NVAF) are reviewed along with methods to detect cardioembolic sources. Warfarin and aspirin are effective in the primary prevention of stroke in NVAF but the relative efficacy remains to be determined.
...
PMID:The cardiac factor in stroke. 162 36
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