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

Although Q-fever is still a relatively rare disease in the Netherlands, its incidence seems to be increasing. In this article we describe the case-history of a 65-year-old woman with a Pudenz-drain, who acquired Q-fever pneumonia while manuring her garden. The course of the disease was deviant, which most likely was caused by colonization of the ventriculo-peritoneal drain with Coxiella burnetii. Q-fever usually presents as a self-limiting illness. In the case of chronic Q-fever, complications such as endocarditis, hepatitis or meningo-encephalitis can be fatal and require long-term treatment. Patients with artificial drains or valves carry a greater risk of developing such complications. Therefore, especially in patients at risk, Q-fever should be included in the differential diagnosis when dealing with a patient with unexplained fever.
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PMID:Q-fever in a patient with a ventriculo-peritoneal drain. Case report and short review of the literature. 820 25

Q fever (Coxiella burnetii) is an uncommon cause of culture-negative infective endocarditis. Four cases of Q fever endocarditis diagnosed at our hospital in the last 7 years are reported (8% of all infective endocarditis). Infection involved a prosthetic heart valve in 3 cases (15% of all prosthetic valve endocarditis), and one patient with single ventricle and pulmonary stenosis in the remaining case. Important complications developed in all cases, and 3 patients underwent cardiac surgery. Mortality was 50%. Some diagnostic and therapeutical aspects of this disease are discussed.
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PMID:[Infectious endocarditis due to Q fever. A report of 4 new cases]. 837 69

Endocarditis by Q fever is a diagnostic and therapeutic challenge given the diagnostic delay and elevated morbidity and mortality it carries. Six cases of endocarditis by Q fever attended over the last 7 years were retrospectively studied. Five patients had been previously diagnosed of valvular involvement and three had prosthesis. Five patients presented a febrile syndrome of prolonged duration with negative hemocultures and progressive valvular changes. One patient presented acute valvular failure requiring emergency surgery. The most significant laboratory data were anemia, thrombocytopenia, high ESR and hypergammaglobulinemia. In the echocardiograms valvular vegetations were observed in 4 cases. All the patients received medical treatment with doxicylin, one associated with rifampicin and another cotrimoxazol. In 4 patients valvular reposition was required due to a severe hemodynamic alteration. After a minimum follow up of 2 years all the patients remain asymptomatic. The serologic evolution is described.
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PMID:[Q fever-induced endocarditis. An analysis of 6 cases]. 796 88

Acute infection with Coxiella burnetti usually results in a self-limited illness requiring a high index of clinical suspicion for diagnosis. Although headache is a common presentation of acute infection with this agent, focal neurological deficits are considered to be limited to chronic infection, most commonly caused by emboli from endocarditis. We report the case of a soldier returning from Desert Storm who presented with headache and a crescendo pattern of transient ischemic attacks and had serology consistent with an acute Q fever infection. The English-language literature on central nervous system infection caused by Coxiella burnetti is reviewed.
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PMID:Q fever meningoencephalitis in a soldier returning from the Persian Gulf War. 851 53

A 14-year-old boy presented with the symptoms and clinical signs of myocarditis. Ventricular arrhythmias were the main manifestation. Dilated left ventricle with slightly impaired contractility and spongy appearance of the myocardium were also noted. Laboratory signs of an acute infectious disease were absent, but a significant rise in the complement fixation titer for Coxiella burnetii was observed. Treatment with oral tetracycline for 6 months resulted in improvement of ventricular arrhythmias and normalization of left ventricular dimensions and structure over the following months. Cardiac involvement in Q fever is rare, and with it endocarditis is usually seen as a chronic form of the disease. Myocarditis associated with Q fever has been reported only in some rare cases but not in children. The case reported here illustrates that the diagnosis of Q fever should also be considered in a case of myocardial involvement in an infectious disease of unknown etiology.
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PMID:[Q-fever associated myocarditis in a 14-year-old boy]. 857 46

Chronic Q fever has been associated with endocarditis, granulomatous hepatitis, and osteomyelitis but only rarely with pregnancy. The apparent predilection of Coxiella burnetii, the organism causing Q fever, for the human placenta suggests that chronic Q fever of pregnancy is due to placentitis. We describe a patient with chronic, clinically apparent Q fever in pregnancy and a successful outcome. The diagnosis was made both by serology and by isolation of C. burnetii from the patient's serum and placenta. Therapy with erythromycin and rifampin contributed to the delivery of a healthy baby. The mother's infection was clinically cured by subsequent therapy with doxycycline and rifampin.
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PMID:Chronic Q fever of pregnancy presenting as Coxiella burnetii placentitis: successful outcome following therapy with erythromycin and rifampin. 858 67

A case of aortic valve endocarditis caused by Coxiella burnetii and operated on with success is reported. The patient is doing well at 18 months follow up. Diagnosis of Q-fever endocarditis was made by high antibodies against phase I Coxiella burnetii antigens titration and by demonstration of aortic valvular vegetations by bidimensional echocardiography. Our patient suffered emergency aortic valve substitution due to acute hemodynamic failure and started a long-term treatment with doxycycline and rifampicin. Some interesting aspects about the diagnosis and treatment of this patient are reviewed because long-term follow-up and serological controls are still rare in the literature.
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PMID:[Infectious endocarditis caused by Q fever]. 874 95

The clinical manifestations of Q fever and bartonelloses can be confused, especially in cases of infectious endocarditis. Differential diagnosis of the diseases is important because the treatments required for Q fever and bartonelloses are different. Laboratory confirmation of a suspected case of either Q fever or bartonelloses is most commonly made by antibody estimation with an indirect immunofluorescence assay. With an indirect immunofluorescence assay, 258 serum samples from patients with Q fever were tested against Bartonella henselae and Bartonella quintana antigens, and 77 serum samples from patients with infection by Bartonella sp. were tested against Coxiella burnetii antigen. Cross-reactivity was observed: more than 50% of the chronic Q fever patients tested had antibodies which reacted against B. henselae antigen to a significant level. This cross-reaction was confirmed by a cross-adsorption study and protein immunoblotting. However, because the levels of specific antibody titers in cases of Bartonella endocarditis are typically extremely high, low-level cross-reaction between C. burnetii antibodies and B. henselae antigen in cases of Q fever endocarditis should not lead to misdiagnosis, provided serology testing for both agents is performed.
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PMID:Serological cross-reactions between Bartonella quintana, Bartonella henselae, and Coxiella burnetii. 886 97

Endocarditis is a rare, but some times fatal, complication of Q fever. Its diagnosis is difficult and it is based on non-specific cardiac findings and a high title of phase I antibodies. The treatment is based on tetracyclines alone or in combination with cotrimoxazole, for long periods of time. The therapeutic efficacy is evaluated by the measurement of phase I antibodies, every three months. The relapses are frequent despite the long period of antibiotic therapy. We report what is probably the first case of Q fever prosthesis endocarditis in Portugal, as a complication following an acute episode of Q fever.
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PMID:[Infectious endocarditis caused by Q fever. Apropos of a clinical case]. 901 44

Infective endocarditis due to fastidious microorganisms is commonly encountered in clinical practice. Some organisms such as fungi account for up to 15% of cases of prosthetic valve infective endocarditis, whereas organisms of the HACEK group (Haemophilus parainfluenzae, H. aphrophilus, and H. paraphrophilus, Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans, Cardiobacterium hominis, Eikenella corrodens, and Kingella kingae) cause 3% of community-acquired cases of infective endocarditis. Special techniques are necessary to identify these microorganisms. A history of contact with mammals or birds may suggest infection caused by Coxiella burnetii (Q fever), Brucella species, or Chlamydia psittaci. A nosocomial cluster of postsurgical infective endocarditis may be caused by Legionella species or Mycobacterium species. If risk factors that are commonly associated with fungal infections (cardiac surgical treatment, prolonged hospitalization, indwelling central venous catheters, and long-term antibiotic use) are present, fungal endocarditis is possible. Patients with endocarditis and a history of periodontal disease or dental work in whom routine blood cultures are negative might have infection due to nutritionally variant streptococci or bacteria of the HACEK group. Communication between the microbiologist and the clinician is of crucial importance for identification of these microorganisms early during the course of the infection before complications such as embolization or valvular failure occur. In this article, we review the microbiologic and clinical features of these organisms and provide recommendations for diagnosis and treatment.
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PMID:Infective endocarditis due to unusual or fastidious microorganisms. 917 37


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