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Query: UMLS:C0014118 (
endocarditis
)
15,629
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Pneumococcal pneumonia
in two or more lobes in frail, elderly patients; staphylococcal and Gram-negative rod pneumonia in patients of any age; lung abscesses; septicemia;
endocarditis
; peritonitis; and meningitis are life-threatening infections. To save patients with these infections, the physician should know the causative organism and educate himself by cultures; estimate the whole body bacterial burden and decrease bacterial numbers by incision and drainage where large collections of pus are accessible; choose antibiotics with care and use two antibiotics if serious prognostic signs are present initially, if there is a change for the worse, or if the laboratory report indicates that multiple organisms are present; check the serum bactericidal level and repeat this test if the route of antibiotic administration is changed; watch for and treat underlying disease; and always monitor for septic shock. Aged patients need special care, as they often have severe underlying disease. The bacterial burden is often high before infection is recognized in elderly patients, and age itself interferes with host defenses.
...
PMID:Life-threatening infections: how to choose the right antibiotics. 84 91
From March 1977 to December 1978, postmortem examination was performed at Wadsworth Veterans Administration Medical Center for 20 patients who had had nosocomially acquired Legionnaires' disease. Seventeen patients died during the acute illness due to Legionnaires' disease, and three patients died after clinical resolution of the acute process. The only consistent postmortem findings were limited to the lungs. Confluent bronchopneumonia, and less frequently
lobar pneumonia
, was present in most cases. Although a spectrum of microscopic pulmonary findings was observed, the characteristic histologic features of acute Legionnaires' disease were an extensive intra-alveolar exudation of macrophages and neutrophils in varying proportions, erythrocytes, and fibrin. Lysis of the inflammatory cells was frequently found. Areas of coagulative necrosis of the lung parenchyma and edematous thickening of the alveolar septa were typically seen. Microscopy of lung tissue from the three patients who died after clinical resolution of the acute process revealed organized pneumonia, with patchy organization of the intra-alveolar exudate and focal obliteration of the alveolar septal framework. Associated postmortem findings were fibrinous
endocarditis
in one case and hemorrhagic infarction of the adrenal glands in two cases. Electron-microscopic examination of the lungs revealed as many as 23 separate bacillary profiles within a single macrophage. Septate binary fission or spore-like structures were not observed.
...
PMID:Legionnaires' disease. Postmortem pathologic findings of 20 cases. 736 72
Right heart infective
endocarditis
presenting as an isolated apical mural mass is an extremely uncommon finding. A 24-year-old woman with congenital deafness and aphasia was admitted with recurrent attacks of fever and
lobar pneumonia
. Her past medical history was significant for an open operation for left nephrolithiasis five months before admission. She had no history of congenital heart defect, intravenous drug use or central venous line insertion. Diagnostic workup revealed a large pedunculated solid mass attached to the apex of the right ventricle and multiple septic foci in both lungs. Repeated blood cultures were negative. In spite of aggressive antibiotic therapy, she had progressively worsening respiratory distress. She was successfully operated for the mass and the pathologic findings were consistent with
endocarditis
. To our knowledge, the anatomical location of the mural
endocarditis
(apex of right ventricle) is a pretty uncommon condition.
...
PMID:Right ventricular mural endocarditis presenting as an isolated apical mass in a non-addict patient with congenital deafness and aphasia. 1915 24
THE FOLLOWING CONCLUSIONS MAY BE DRAWN, BASED UPON THE RESULT OF OUR RESEARCHES: 1. Organisms of the pneumococcus or streptococcus group are present in the lungs of practically all cases, whether normal or showing a variety of lesions; strictly speaking, they were found by us in forty out of forty-two cases, or in 95% of our series. 2. The pneumococci and the streptococci were obtained in practically similar percentages-that is, in 50 % of the cases. 3. Pneumococci were not obtained more frequently in the small series of patients exposed for some time to hospital atmosphere; our tables show the contrary to obtain. The number of cases examined were, however, insufficient, and the findings may thus be accidental, and hence of no value. 4. Test micro-organisms, namely, small portions-half a drachm or less-of B. prodigiosus, introduced into the human mouth after death, were conveyed to and recovered from the lungs by culture in a little over half of the cases in which this experiment was tried. The test micro-organisms are, we believe, conveyed to the lungs with the fluid which collects in mouths of persons after death, and which in many cases collects just before death. The numerous manipulations entailed in the removal of the body from the wards to the morgue greatly facilitate the entrance of any fluid from the pharynx and buccal cavity into the lungs. It follows logically, from the results obtained in this experiment, that the cultural findings after death are no guide to the bacterial contents of the lungs during life, and that any deductions made from such findings are unreliable and deceptive. Granted that our explanation be correct, there is every reason to believe that any of the micro-organisms present in the mouths and pharynx and in many cases in the stomach contents may enter the lungs and, if the conditions be suitable, increase in numbers, during the time between death and the examination of the lungs. There exists, perhaps, more frequently than has hitherto been suspected, a series of diplococci, intermediate between the typical pneumococci and streptococci. The diplococci of this type have been found in forty (40) per cent. of our cases. The differential diagnosis of these atypical diplococci from the pneumococci and streptococci is a difficult one, depending, as it does, upon general cultural characteristics. No single character, such as the presence of capsules or the fermentation of inulin, virulence, etc., has been found to be a certain criterion. The few agglutinative reactions we have made seem to show that these intermediate diplococci, those of Groups II, III, and IV, have no or only slight agglutinative affinities to the typical pneumococcus. Further tests must, however, be made with the various methods at our disposal before this statement can be accepted as final. These diplococci are of interest from the fact that they have been found in the blood during life, and in the pial exudate of cases of meningitis,
endocarditis
, etc. 6. Our studies have thrown no light whatever upon the conditions which determine the onset of
lobar pneumonia
in apparently healthy persons. Moreover, we have been unable to draw conclusions as to the presence of pneumococci in the lungs during life, or as to the channels by which they gain access thereto.
...
PMID:A STUDY OF PNEUMOCOCCI AND ALLIED ORGANISMS IN HUMAN MOUTHS AND LUNGS AFTER DEATH. 1986 10
The authors report a rare presentation of bilateral Klebsiella pneumoniae endophthalmitis in an ambulatory patient without other known medical conditions. A 51-year-old Chinese woman presented with severe bilateral reduction in vision, photophobia, pain, and eyelid swelling. Hospital admission and evaluation revealed vitreous, blood, and urine cultures positive for K. pneumoniae (K1 serotype). Additional work-up revealed
endocarditis
, multiple liver abscesses, brain abscesses, and left
lobar pneumonia
. The patient underwent multiple bilateral intravitreal antibiotic injections. Ultimate visual acuity was no light perception in both eyes. K. pneumoniae endogenous endophthalmitis is a severe but potentially subclinical disease. Early diagnosis requires a high index of suspicion and recognition of risk factors including Asian ancestry and other sources of systemic infection including, most commonly, liver abscess.
...
PMID:Bilateral Klebsiella pneumoniae (K1 serotype) endogenous endophthalmitis as the presenting sign of disseminated infection. 2132 88
Bi-valvular pneumococcal
endocarditis
in Austrian syndrome, which includes a triad of pneumococcal
endocarditis
, pneumonia, and meningitis, is a rare but life-threatening disease. We present a case of a woman found to have Austrian syndrome who presented to the emergency department (ED) with dehydration and radiographical signs of
lobar pneumonia
and quickly deteriorated to fulminant cardiogenic shock in less than four hours. An early echocardiogram in the ED confirmed a diagnosis of bi-valvular
endocarditis
with severe aortic and mitral valve insufficiency and large vegetations on the valve leaflets requiring emergent surgical intervention with double valve replacement. Assumed meningitis as a part of the triad of Austrian syndrome was confirmed by imaging the day after hospital admission. Early diagnosis of
endocarditis
by obtaining the echocardiogram in the ED along with emergent surgical intervention allowed for a favorable outcome for the patient.
...
PMID:Emergent double valve replacement in Austrian syndrome. 2521 21