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Query: UMLS:C0014118 (endocarditis)
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A case of acute enterococcal aortic valve endocarditis is presented in which the complication of a septal myocardial abscess was diagnosed clinically and successfully treated surgically. This represents the first instant, to our knowledge, in which the preoperative diagnosis of a myocardial abscess served as the indication for emergency cardiac surgical intervention in active endocarditis with successful outcome. The diagnostic parameters permitting clinical recognition of a myocardial abscess include the development of advancing degrees of atrioventricular and bundle branch block, and the finding of pericarditis or pericardial effusion in aortic valvular infections. Two additional findings were noted in the present case: echocardiographic evidence of septal thickening, and loss of septal Q waves on the electrocardiogram. Since myocardial abscesses do not respond to medical therapy, continuous electrocardiographic monitoring and frequent echocardiographic determinations are recommended in cases of active aortic valve endocarditis to permit early diagnosis and surgical management of this complication.
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PMID:Diagnosis and successful management of septal myocardial abscess: a complication of bacterial endocarditis. 61 Apr 17

In conclusion, patients on chronic maintenance dialysis have an increased incidence of death from cardiovascular disease. Hypertension plays a major role, and these patients must be carefully monitored for complete control of blood pressure. Adequacy of ultrafiltration to maintain normal extracellular volume is an essential part of the dialytic treatment. Hypertensive patients should be screened for excessive renin secretion because of its possible role in unresponsive hypertension in patients on dialysis. Nephrectomy should be used when necessary, where dialysis and antihypertensive medication have not adequately controlled blood pressure. Patients must be monitored for the presence of pericardial disease to avoid subsequent pericardial effusion and the development of constrictive pericarditis with its adverse effect on myocardial function. When constrictive pericarditis is present, it obviously should be relieved by appropriate surgery. Efforts should be made to minimize cardiac output in hemodialysis patients. Whether or not routine transfusions to maintain a higher hematocrit are indicated is a question that cannot yet be answered. However, patients with marginal cardiovascular function who are accepted on hemodialysis and must have an arteriovenous shunt should be supported in any manner to minimize an increase in cardiac output. Early and aggressive treatment of known episodes of sepsis is important in the elimination of valvular endocarditis in this patient population. Perhaps one of the finer indicators of adequacy of hemodialysis will be K rate and peak immunoreactive insulin levels. Continued abnormality of these parameters may contribute to cardiovascular disease. Clearly, further study of the effect of abnormal carbohydrate metabolism on lipid metabolism is in order. Serum triglyceride, serum cholesterol and lipid electrophoretic pattern should be followed to evaluate the beneficial effects of drug therapy and changes in dialytic technique on the development of cardiovascular disease. Careful monitoring of calcium, phosphorus, bone films and parathyroid hormone levels is indicated to assess parathyroid status. The use of aluminum binders and parathyroidectomy to prevent vascular and myocardial calcification is important in the therapy of these patients. The use of cardiac catheterization, coronary artery arteriography, and possibly cardiac vascular repair, should be considered in the chronic hemodialysis patient with coronary artery disease if he is otherwise well. Adequacy of hemodialysis perhaps can be evaluated through its effect on all of the above parameters. Whether or not changes in artificial kidney treatments can correct the final vascular disease remains to be seen.
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PMID:Cardiovascular disease in uremic patients on hemodialysis. 109 1

Thirty-five consecutive patients with systemic lupus erythematosus were enrolled in a prospective study. Investigations included a physical evaluation, tests for antinuclear antibodies and antiphospholipid antibodies, an electrocardiogram, a plain chest film, a 2D echocardiogram and a Doppler study. Clinical cardiac manifestations and alterations of the electrocardiogram were infrequent (17% and 11% of patients, respectively) and no patients had abnormal chest film findings. In contrast, echocardiographic abnormalities were common (82% of patients), although moderate in most instances. Pericardial involvement was found in 15 patients (42.8%); a pericardial effusion was seen in 9 of the 14 patients with inactive disease (p < 0.003), whereas thickening of the pericardium was visible in 4 patients with active disease and 2 of the 21 patients with inactive disease. Valve abnormalities were found in 17 patients (48.5%), but were not related to the presence of antiphospholipid antibodies; valve alterations included verrucous endocarditis in one case, valve thickening in one case, mitral prolapse in five cases, and mild or moderate regurgitation in 15 cases (aortic in 2 cases, mitral in 7 cases, pulmonary in 3 cases and tricuspid in 7 cases). Alterations in ventricular chamber size and kinetics were also fairly common, albeit of uncertain pathogenetic significance. These data confirm the value of 2D echocardiography for identifying and monitoring cardiac involvement in systemic lupus erythematosus, even in patients with no overt clinical manifestations.
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PMID:[Evaluation of cardiac involvement in systemic lupus erythematosus. Clinical and echographic study]. 130 69

"Mycotic" aneurysm was originally described by Osler in 1885. It occurs in a normal or atherosclerotic artery from septic emboli in patients with infective endocarditis. However, now the term "mycotic" aneurysm is applied to all cases of aneurysms caused by any organisms. From September 1988 to November 1990, four cases of ruptured mycotic aneurysm were diagnosed at our institute. Three were males and one was a female; they were elderly with atherosclerosis of the aorta. The diagnosis was established by computed tomography (CT) scan, bacteriology or operative findings. Two of the patients underwent emergency operation; only one survived. In general, the diagnosis of mycotic aneurysm is based on the classical features of fever, abdominal or chest pain, positive blood culture and a pulsatile mass. Because the clinical manifestations are often variable, a patient may present with chronic sepsis (esp. Salmonella sp) of unknown origin with deterioration to a fatal outcome from the aneurysmal rupture, which is a rare cause of retroperitoneal abscess or pericardial effusion. The principles of management, including high clinical suspicion, an accurate diagnosis by imaging studies (arteriography or CT scan), prolonged effective antibiotic therapy, arterial ligation or wide excision of the infected lesion, intraoperative Gram's stain and culture, extra-anatomic bypass grafting through clean tissue planes, and prolonged postoperative follow-up, are indispensable to reduce morbidity and mortality.
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PMID:Mycotic aneurysm rupture: report of four cases. 136 21

The purpose of the study was to assess the prevalence and the type of cardiac abnormalities in patients with HIV infection. Echocardiographic examination (M-mode, two-dimensional and Doppler) was performed in 51 patients (40 male, 11 female), whose mean age was 29 +/- 10 years; 48 of them (94%) were intravenous drug addicts, 3 (6%) homosexuals. Diagnosis was AIDS in 19 (37%) patients, AIDS related complex in 19 (37%) and asymptomatic infection in 13 (26%). Echocardiography was normal in 13 subjects. Pericardial effusion was found in 19 patients (in 8 of them, this was the only cardiac abnormality). Valve vegetations were found in 16 patients (3 of them had pericardial effusion, 5 had ventricular dilatation or wall motion abnormalities, 1 had both pericardial and myocardial impairment). Myocardial dysfunction was found in 18 patients: 11 had left ventricular dilatation (5 with wall hypokinesia), 1 had right ventricular enlargement, 1 had biventricular dilatation and 5 had only wall motion abnormalities (diffuse or localized). During the follow-up 9 patients died: 8 had AIDS, 1 was asymptomatic. Eight subjects died during hospitalization (none because of cardiac causes) and one at home for sudden unexplained death. Echocardiography had displayed myocardial dysfunction in 6 of them, thickened pericardium in 1 and was normal in 2. Pathologic examination (performed in 8 subjects) showed cardiac enlargement in 3 subjects, thickened pericardium in 2 and valve vegetation in 1. One subject had histopathologic diagnosis of myocarditis and 7 had non specific histologic abnormalities. The study shows a cardiac involvement in 75% of HIV infected patients: 35% had myocardial dysfunction, 37% pericardial disease, 31% infective endocarditis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Echocardiographic evaluation of HIV-positive subjects]. 189 21

Before the development of echocardiography, cardiac disease in the horse was diagnosed if a loud heart murmur (grade III-IV/VI or louder) and clinical signs of congestive heart failure (coughing, edema, venous distention, jugular pulsations) were detected on physical examination. Arrhythmias that persisted during and after exercise also indicated cardiac disease, which could be characterized electrocardiographically. Electrocardiography, thoracic radiography, angiography, cardiac catheterization, and oximetry could add only small pieces of information about the heart. M-mode echocardiography provided the first "window" with which to evaluate the heart and its intracardiac structures, albeit an ice-pick one-dimensional view. With M-mode echocardiography, the diameter of the aorta at the valves, the left ventricle, right ventricle, and left atrial appendage, as well as the thickness of the interventricular septum and left ventricular free wall, could be measured. Motion and thickness of the tricuspid, mitral, and aortic valves could be assessed, but only in a one-dimensional plane. Two-dimensional echocardiography provided an added dimension, resulting in visualization of all the intracardiac structures, aorta, and pulmonary artery. Two-dimensional echocardiography became the diagnostic technique of choice for the evaluation and characterization of congenital cardiac disease in critically ill neonates, as well as in adult horses. Two-dimensional echocardiography also improved the ability to diagnose valvular regurgitations, characterize valvular lesions (bacterial endocarditis, ruptured chorda tendineae), myocardial function (segmental wall motion abnormalities), atrial size, mass lesions (endocarditis, neoplasia, and thrombi), and pericardial effusion. Information about blood flow was obtained using contrast echocardiography but was limited to certain cardiac abnormalities (congenital cardiac defects and tricuspid regurgitation). This information about blood flow was limited to the detection of positive or negative contrast jets. Comprehensive information about blood flow was lacking until the application of Doppler echocardiography to equine cardiology. Pulsed-wave and color flow Doppler echocardiography resulted in precise localization of the abnormal blood flow and semiquantitation of the shunt flow or regurgitant jet. Color flow Doppler echocardiography sped up the localization and semiquantitation of the jet in many instances and provided some information about blood flow velocity in the enhanced and variance modes. The peak velocity of jets can be determined using continuous-wave Doppler echocardiography. This value then can be used to estimate pressure difference between cardiac chambers or to calculate cardiac output noninvasively if angles parallel to flow can be obtained. Thus, information about cardiac size, function, and blood flow can be combined to diagnose cardiac disease in horses and to formulate a prognosis for life and performance.
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PMID:Advances in echocardiography. 193 72

The authors report a case of Brucella Melitensis endocarditis of a bicuspid aortic valve which caused rapid progression of the hemodynamic signs of aortic stenosis, and was associated with a para-aortic abscess and a pericardial effusion. Surgery resulted in correction of the hemodynamic abnormalities and cured the infection: the results were sustained 10 months after operation. This case illustrates the precision of the Doppler, echocardiographic diagnosis of the lesions, which was confirmed at surgery so that potentially dangerous cardiac catheterisation could be avoided.
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PMID:[Brucella endocarditis of bicuspid aortic valve. Surgical treatment with successful result]. 206 20

Since it is very rare that cardiac tamponade due to myocardial rupture caused by infective endocarditis, occurs we are reporting this case. A 62 year old man, who had underlying diseases of pneumoconiosis and hypertensive heart disease, visited Chikuho Rosai Hospital complaining of chest oppression and general fatigue on Feb. 7, 1987. He was diagnosed as having ischemic heart disease by electrocardiogram. Two days later, he suddenly had chills and a fever, and the laboratory data showed leukocytosis and a positive C-reactive protein (CRP). The echo cardiogram showed mitral regurgitation (MR) and aortic regurgitation (AR), but neither vegetation nor pericardial effusion was observed. On Feb. 16, he was admitted with shock, and he died the next day. The blood cultures grew gram-positive cocci, respectively. From the clinical symptoms, chest roentgenogram and electrocardiogram, we suspected a cardiac tamponade. On autopsy findings, though coronary arteries were intact, the aortic valves had severe valvular adhesions, calcifications and hypertrophies. The rupture hole was observed in the left ventricles, which was just under the aortic valve through the pericardiac space. It seemed that he died of a cardiac tamponade due to the outflow of blood from this hole. On histopathologic findings of the cardiac wall, gram-positive cocci and many of neutrophils were observed.
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PMID:[An autopsied case of infective endocarditis with cardiac tamponade due to myocardial rupture]. 207 73

We present a patient with an occult adenocarcinoma which manifested clinically as a confusional syndrome due to multiple cerebral infarctions associated to pericarditis and immunological abnormalities. Neurological involvement was secondary to nonbacterial thromboembolic endocarditis (NBTE) which did not provoke cardiac murmurs nor was detected in type B echocardiogram. Malignant cells were not observed in the pericardial effusion or in the pericardial biopsy (1.5 x 1 cm). The clinical picture mimicked an atypical lupous syndrome. The positive diagnosis was established on necropsy. The cardiovascular complications are not frequent in cancer. NBTE usually shows up clinically as a neurologic syndrome due to multiple cerebral infarctions: the normality of complementary exams and the lack of demonstration of an underlying disease do not rule out its diagnosis. When suspecting an NBTE treatment with heparin should be promptly started.
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PMID:[Multifocal encephalopathy as the principle manifestation of an occult cancer]. 209 Nov 35

The paper reports a case of infective endocarditis of the valve, with an insidious and slow onset accompanied by low fever, debility, loss of weight, anemia, and the concomitant echocardiographic observation of pericardial effusion. Subsequent echocardiographic tests produced images which probably referred to valvular vegetation. As a matter of fact these findings proved to be result of the rupture of the latero-posterior tendinous cord of the mitral flap and other similar cords whose stumps, covered in fibrin, had adhered to the edge of the anterior cups. This finding was discovered during surgery, which was performed early and successfully, and was followed by excellent long-term results.
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PMID:[A case of rupture of the tendinous cord caused by infective endocarditis]. 209 52


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