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Query: UMLS:C0014118 (
endocarditis
)
15,629
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome is a serious problem worldwide. Recent advances in the knowledge about human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) replication and the treatment of HIV infection have improved survival in HIV patients. Because of the longer survival in HIV patients, the more manifestations of late-stage HIV infection will be seen, including HIV-related cardiac diseases. The common cardiac manifestations in patients with the acquired immunodeficiency virus are
pericardial effusion
, myocarditis, dilated cardiomyopathy,
endocarditis
, pulmonary hypertension, malignant neoplasms, and drug-related cardiotoxicity. This review focuses on these cardiac manifestations in patients with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome.
...
PMID:Cardiac manifestations of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. 1092 47
OBJECTIVE - To evaluate the cardiac abnormalities and their evolution during the course of the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, as well as to correlate clinical and pathological data. METHODS - Twenty-one patients, admitted to the hospital with the diagnosis of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, were prospectively studied and followed until their death. Age ranged from 19 to 42 years (17 males). ECG and echocardiogram were also obtained every six months. After death, macro- and microscopic examinations were also performed. RESULTS - The most frequent causes of referral to the hospital were: diarrhea or repeated pneumonias, tuberculosis, toxoplasmosis or Kaposi sarcoma. The most frequent findings were acute or chronic pericarditis (42%) and dilated cardiomyopathy (19%). Four patients died of cardiac problems: infective
endocarditis
, pericarditis with
pericardial effusion
, bacterial myocarditis and infection by Toxoplasma gondii. CONCLUSION - Severe cardiac abnormalities were the cause of death in some patients. In the majority of the patients, a good correlation existed between clinical and anatomical-pathological data. Cardiac evaluation was important to detect early manifestations and treat them accordingly, even in asymptomatic patients.
...
PMID:Cardiac abnormalities in the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. A prospective study with a clinical-pathological correlation in twenty-one adult patients. 1075 83
Cardiovascular emergencies in oncology patients include all of the usual cardiac problems, as well as complications of cancer and its therapy.
Pericardial effusions
and tamponade, cardiac masses, and extrinsic compression of the heart and great vessels by tumor masses, or fluid collections may all occur. Certain tumors may secrete mediators that are directly toxic to the heart; for example, catecholamines are secreted by pheochromocytomas and serotonin is secreted by carcinoid tumors. Tumors can also cause arrhythmias due to the mediators they secret or to direct mechanical irritation of the heart or pericardium. Cancer therapy is also associated with cardiac emergencies. Perioperative myocardial ischemia or infarction, as well as arrhythmias, may complicate surgery.
Pericardial effusions
and tamponade can follow surgery, radiation, or chemotherapy. Chemotherapy with anthracyclines, mitoxantrone, and trastuzumab may prompt acute and chronic heart failure. 5-Fluorouracil causes coronary spasm in some patients, leading to angina, myocardial infarction, arrhythmias, and/or sudden death. Cyclophosphamide, particularly in high doses, may produce acute myopericarditis. Radiation may cause acute pericardial disease and late sequelae such as myocardial infarction, acute valvular insufficiency, or effusive constrictive pericarditis.
Endocarditis
also occurs in cancer patients in association with vascular access devices and immune compromise. This review will discuss each of these complications of cancer and its therapy.
...
PMID:Cardiovascular emergencies in the cancer patient. 1086 14
Many patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) develop cardiac manifestations during the course of their disease. Pericarditis is most commonly seen, with a reported prevalence of 60%. Myocardial involvement is present in only a minority of patients. In recent years, due to better noninvasive diagnostic techniques, valvular abnormalities can be demonstrated in an increasing number of patients. Depending on the technique used, valvulopathy can be demonstrated in up to 77% of SLE patients. Although most of the valvular lesions will be present without any symptoms, valve incompetence can result in congestive heart failure. Valvular lesions are associated with IgG anticardiolipin antibodies (aCL) and disease duration. We present a patient with SLE and secondary antiphospholipid syndrome (APS) who developed acute congestive heart failure due to pancarditis.
Endocarditis
, together with left ventricular dysfunction and
pericardial effusion
, were present. The
endocarditis
caused hemodynamically significant mitral valve insufficiency due to thickening of the mitral cusps. Just two weeks prior to the occurrence of congestive heart failure echocardiography had been normal. Treatment with high dose corticosteroids resulted in a gradual, almost complete recovery. Literature concerning cardiac manifestations in lupus is reviewed.
...
PMID:Cardiac abnormalities in SLE: pancarditis. 1086 93
From January 1991 through December 1999, 5 consecutive patients who were infected with human immunodeficiency virus presented in need of cardiac surgery. All were men; the median age was 44 years. Two of them presented with mitral and aortic infectious valve
endocarditis
, 1 with tricuspid
endocarditis
, 1 with prosthetic valve
endocarditis
, and 1 with pericarditis and pericardial tamponade. Under cardiopulmonary bypass, the 4 patients with
endocarditis
underwent these procedures: mitral and aortic valve replacement (2), tricuspid valve replacement (1), and aortic valve replacement (reoperation) and concomitant repair of a mycotic ascending aortic aneurysm (1). In the patient who had
pericardial effusion
, subxifoid pericardiostomy and drainage were performed, and a pericardial window was created. There was no intraoperative mortality. The patient with
pericardial effusion
died 8 days after surgery; he was in septic shock and had multiple organ failure. Two deaths occurred at 2 and 63 months, due to hemoptysis and sudden death, respectively. The 2 patients who underwent double valve replacement are alive and in good condition after a median follow-up of 71 months. Cardiac surgery is indicated in selected patients infected by the human immunodeficiency virus. These patients are frequently drug abusers or homosexual. Valvular endocarditis is the most common finding. Hospital morbidity and mortality rates are higher than usual in this group of patients.
...
PMID:Cardiac surgery in patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus. 1119 8
Although formation of an aortic root abscess is a frequent complication of aortic valve
endocarditis
in adults, this complication has been rarely observed in children. In the majority of cases it has been described in children without underlying congenital heart disease. Due to the rarity of this complication, diagnosis and treatment is frequently delayed in childhood. We report a 2 1/2 year old girl who developed
pericardial effusion
in the course of pneumonia. Echocardiographic examinations, which were performed because of the
pericardial effusion
, revealed after 6 days the development of a cystic structure posterior to the aortic root. There was a perforation of this aortic root abscess to the left ventricular outflow tract; the aortic and mitral valves however were normal without endocarditic vegetations. Surgery was performed on the 10th day following a rapid increase in the size of the abscess. During surgery the abscess was drained and the perforation to the left ventricle was closed with direct sutures. Intraoperative transesophageal echocardiography confirmed a good surgical result. Blood cultures remained negative; in the material from the abscess however we found staphylococcus aureus. The postoperative course was uneventful. Our case demonstrates the necessity of detailed and repeated echocardiographic examinations in children with possible symptoms of bacterial endocarditis (in our case
pericardial effusion
) as well as the requirement of cultures of the abscess for identification of the infective organism. Intraoperative transesophageal echocardiography allows exact description of an aortic root abscess, its relation to other cardiac structures and immediate evaluation of the surgical result.
...
PMID:[Aortic root abscess without involvement of the aortic valve: diagnosis and therapy in a 2.5-year-old child]. 1126 3
Cardiac disease in association with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is uncommon. Reports include pericarditis,
pericardial effusion
, myocarditis, myocardial infarction,
endocarditis
and arrythmias. Myocardial inflammation related to IBD may be due to a drug hypersensitivity reaction or micronutrient deficiency, or may be secondary to the underlying IBD as an extraintestinal manifestation. In this setting, myocarditis usually presents as congestive heart failure and/or refractory arrhythmia. Prognosis varies among reported cases, including complete recovery, remission with recurrence and fatal disease. Treatment of myocarditis has included aminosalicylates and immunosuppressive medications. Recently, newer therapies for IBD have been developed, such as tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-a) antagonists. The present report describes a case of a 46-year-old man with clinical and endoscopic evidence of moderately active colonic Crohn's disease who developed congestive heart failure due to giant cell myocarditis. Little clinical improvement occurred with immunosuppressive therapy. Only after the addition of etanercept, a TNF-a p75 receptor antagonist, did complete clinical resolution occur. These authors conclude that the use of TNF-a antagonists may be considered in the treatment of life-threatening extraintestinal manifestations of inflammatory bowel disease.
...
PMID:Giant cell myocarditis, in a patient with Crohn's disease, treated with etanercept--a tumour necrosis factor-alpha antagonist. 1157 4
The epidemiology of cardiac complications related to HIV including cardiomyopathy, increased left ventricular mass, myocarditis,
pericardial effusion
,
endocarditis
, and malignancy are discussed. A large number of HIV-infected individuals will present with cardiac complications in the next decade as chronic viral infection, co-infections, drug therapy, and immunosuppression affect the heart. Understanding the nature and course of cardiac illness related to HIV infection will allow appropriate monitoring, early intervention and therapy, and will provide a baseline to evaluate the effects of new therapeutic regimens such as highly active antiretroviral therapy on the cardiovascular system.
...
PMID:Epidemiology of cardiovascular involvement in HIV disease and AIDS. 1176 81
Infection with varicella zoster virus, leading to chicken pox in susceptible hosts, is usually a benign self-limiting disease conferring immunity in those affected. Cardiac complications are rare, but when present may lead to severe morbidity or mortality. We have recently encountered three children, all of whom developed significant cardiac complications secondary to infection with varicella. Myocarditis has long been associated with such infection. The pathological mechanism is presumed similar to other cardiotropic viruses, where both direct cytopathic and secondary auto-immune effects contribute to myocardial cellular destruction and ventricular dysfunction. Complications include arrhythmias and progression to dilated cardiomyopathy. Pericarditis, and secondary
pericardial effusion
, related to infection with the virus is most commonly associated with secondary bacterial infiltration. Both cardiac tamponade and chronic pericardial constriction may result.
Endocarditis
complicating varicella has only been described in the last fifteen years, and is associated with the emergence of virulent strains of both streptococcus and staphylococcus, the two organisms most commonly associated with
endocarditis
. The exact mechanism by which varicella causes secondary bacterial endocarditis remains unclear. Whilst cardiac complications of infection with the varicella zoster virus are rare, the resulting complications are potentially life threatening. Evidence of varicella-induced carditis must be aggressively pursued in any child with signs of acute cardiac decompensation in whom chicken pox is confirmed or suspected.
...
PMID:Cardiac complications in children following infection with varicella zoster virus. 1181 17
Better treatment and supportive care are prolonging the lives of patients with HIV, which is resulting in a higher prevalence of long-term effects of HIV. Autopsy and echocardiography studies support frequent involvement of the heart in advanced stages of HIV infection. The most common cardiac manifestations of HIV are dilated cardiomyopathy, myocarditis, pulmonary hypertension,
pericardial effusion
,
endocarditis
, HIV-associated malignant neoplasms, and drug-related cardiotoxicity. Highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) has prolonged many patients' lives, but many cardiac sequelae of HIV are not affected by HAART and continue to develop even with treatment. In addition, HAART itself may be associated with an increase in peripheral artery and coronary artery diseases. This review focuses on the most recent knowledge about HIV-associated cardiovascular disease. Careful cardiovascular evaluation in the course of HIV disease can identify cardiac complications early enough to treat. In addition, the study of HIV-related cardiovascular disease may shed light on the mechanisms of non-HIV-related cardiovascular disease.
...
PMID:HIV infection and the cardiovascular system. 1215 22
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