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

We retrospectively reviewed the records of 110 patients with infective endocarditis (IE) who were hospitalized between 1977 and 1994 at a tertiary referral center in Southern India to assess the occurrence of neurologic complications and the factors that contribute to their development, and to compare our experience from a developing country with the reported data from developed countries. There were 62 males and 48 females, aged 0.6-59 (mean 24.0) years. Rheumatic heart disease (RHD) was the most frequent underlying cardiac lesion accounting for 65 (59.1%) patients. Neurologic complications were observed in 58 (52.7%) patients: cerebral embolism was the most frequent (23 patients). Thirty-five (31.8%) patients died. Mortality in the group with neurologic complications (41.4%) was significantly higher than in the group without (21.2%) (p = 0.04). The duration of symptoms prior to the diagnosis was longer in the group with neurologic complications, mean 174.9 versus 95.6 days (p = 0.03). We conclude that (1) IE occurs at younger ages in the Third World and RHD still constitute the major underlying heart disease; (2) in spite of the differences in the general aspects of IE between developed and developing nations, the frequency and gravity of neurologic complications are similar, (3) mortality is significantly increased in patients with neurologic complications; and (4) delay in the diagnosis of IE contributes to the development of neurologic complications.
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PMID:Neurologic complications of infective endocarditis observed in a south Indian referral hospital. 878 68

The epidemiology of IE has evolved over the past 50 years. Mitral valve prolapse and degenerative valvular disease have replaced rheumatic heart disease as the most common predisposing conditions. The average age of patients with IE has increased, and nosocomially acquired cases are becoming more common. Although viridans streptococci are currently responsible for a smaller proportion of cases than previously, this group of bacteria remains the most common cause of prosthetic value and native valve endocarditis. Staphylococci are the most important cause in some community hospitals, in nosocomial IE, and in IVDUs. IE is a multisystem disease, and patients may present with diverse clinical features. In the absence of direct histopathologic and microbiologic examination of valvular vegetations, the diagnosis of IE depends on the detection of endocardial abnormalities and the isolation of a pathogen from blood. Blood culture remains the most important laboratory test and yields the causative microorganism in 95% of patients. Echocardiography has become an important tool for detecting endocardial lesions. The clinical features of IE in IVDUs are somewhat different than those in other populations. The microbiology is distinctive, and right-sided involvement with septic pulmonary emboli is the most common clinical scenario in this group.
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PMID:Clinical approach to infective endocarditis. 885 30

The first Ross operation in Copenhagen was performed in 1992, and from the beginning of the series, which now numbers 80 patients, the underlying philosophy has been based on our belief that the autograft/Ross operation possesses a number of important and unique advantages compared with other alternatives, particularly for patients with complicated aortic valve disease in which alternative treatments are not satisfactory. The series includes patients of 6 weeks to 71 years of age, many with complicating conditions (endocarditis, 24 patients [native valve, 15; prosthetic valve, 9; advanced 17; active, 15; healed, 9], prosthetic valve dysfunction, 4; small aortic root, 2; ascending aortic aneurysm, 5; ventricular septum defect, 2; mitral valve disease, 7; tricuspid valve disease, 2; rheumatic heart disease, 7; aortic annular dilatation, 2; coronary artery disease, 4; extreme obesity, 1; severely reduced left ventricular function, 7; and previous heart surgery, 28). Mortality is low: hospital mortality, 3 patients (3.75%); late mortality, 1 patient (1.25%). Three patients have required reoperation, however; 1 because of autograft insufficiency and 2 because of pulmonary homograft stenosis, but autograft function is good in 73 (< or = 1+) and acceptable (< or = 2+) in 3 patients, and seems to be stable at follow-up. All in all, the early results are encouraging. We are particularly enthusiastic about the Ross operation for patients with complicated aortic valve pathology such as endocarditis, the small aortic root, combined valvular and subvalvular stenosis, and we believe that the Ross operation may be the best operation for these patients.
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PMID:Changing indications for the Ross operation. 889 19

The pathogenesis of nonrheumatic calcification of the mitral valve was investigated by analyzing the clinical and echocardiographic characteristics of patients with mitral valvular calcification without any findings suggestive of rheumatic heart disease or infective endocarditis. Calcification of the mitral valve was observed in nine patients, who all had calcified stenotic (aortic valve area < 1 cm2) bicuspid aortic valve. Calcification of the mitral valve was localized to the basal portion of ventricular aspect of the anterior mitral leaflet and contiguous to that of the aortic valve. Mobility and thickness of the mitral leaflet was normal except for the calcified portion. Calcification of the mitral valve was not contiguous to posterior mitral annular calcification nor was related to direction of aortic regurgitant flow. In patients with calcified stenotic bicuspid aortic valve, calcification of the mitral valve was not associated with location of the two aortic cusps, aortic valve area, aortic valvular peak pressure gradient, direction of the left ventricular outflow, end-diastolic left ventricular outflow tract dimension, end-diastolic dimension of the aortic annulus, incidence of aortic regurgitation, calcification of the aortic arch, or risk factors of atherosclerosis. Six patients with mitral valvular calcification had aortic valve replacement. Preoperative coronary angiogram of these patients was normal. Calcification of the aortic valve was on the ventricular and aortic aspects. The calcification of the aortic valve, anterior mitral ring, or anterior mitral leaflet was not rheumatic in these six patients. Rheumatic disease, risk factors of atherosclerosis, mechanical stress by left ventricular outflow or aortic regurgitant flow, or mitral annular calcification did not appear to be related to mitral valvular calcification. The distribution of aortic and mitral valvular calcification suggested that the calcification of the mitral valve was due to progression of calcification of the bicuspid aortic valve.
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PMID:[Nonrheumatic calcification of the mitral valve in patients with stenotic calcified bicuspid aortic valve]. 893 38

Underlying pathologic disorders of infected valves were analyzed in 36 consecutive patients with infective endocarditis (from April 1987 to May 1995) of 18 aortic, 11 mitral and 8 prosthetic valves. Among 29 cases of native valve endocarditis, 27 had known organic changes [aortic valve prolapse 8, bicuspid aortic valve 4, annuloaortic ectasia 1, mitral valve prolapse 9 (including 2 cases associated with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy), looping chordae 1, rheumatic heart disease 4]. However, the remaining two cases had unknown etiology. Histological examination of these two aortic valves revealed proliferation of small vessels and remnants of vascular smooth muscle cells, suggesting postinflammatory valve prolapse. Five cases with definite pathology had no clinical signs of infection. The preponderance of surgically resected valves with infective endocarditis in Japan is non-rheumatic in origin.
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PMID:[Surgical pathology of infective endocarditis]. 906 24

We review the predisposing conditions, the presenting signs and symptoms, as well as the risk factors and bacterial etiologies in children with infective endocarditis, focusing on hospital course and outcome. We conducted a retrospective analysis of 76 cases of endocarditis in 73 patients occurring at Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh from January 1958 through December 1992. The median age of the patients was 9 years (range, 1 month to 18 years). Predisposing conditions included congenital heart disease (62 patients) and rheumatic heart disease (four patients). Seventy-seven percent of the children with congenital heart disease had undergone cardiac surgery. After therapy with appropriate antibiotics was started, blood cultures for 67 patients (70 episodes of infective endocarditis) remained positive for a mean (+/-SD) of 0.7 +/- 1.41 days, and all patients who presented with fever (75 episodes in 72 patients) remained febrile for a mean (+/-SD) of 4.28 +/- 6.21 days. Secondary fever occurred in 39% of the children. Thirty (41%) of the 73 patients survived without any complications and 13 (18%) died. Fifteen children with complications required surgery. Children with endocarditis caused by Staphylococcus aureus were more likely than those with infection caused by viridans streptococci to have prolonged fever, secondary fever, and/or complications as well to require surgery.
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PMID:Infective endocarditis: 35 years of experience at a children's hospital. 914 42

A 36-old-woman was admitted with an infectious syndrome, respiratory insufficiency and vasculitis. There was a history of chronic intravenous drug abuse, sexual promiscuity and rheumatic heart disease. She had HIV positive tests. The vasculitis and heart failure worsened and the patient died of stroke. At autopsy it was found histologic evidence of AIDS, rheumatic heart disease with Aschoff nodes, infective endocarditis with cerebral abscesses and thalamic infarction.
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PMID:[Rheumatic heart disease and infective endocarditis in a patient with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome]. 918 24

Analysis of the data from 7188 cases seen in the 1980s two general hospitals in Shanghai and comparison of the data with those in the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s revealed that the percentage of heart diseases among the inpatients in medical wards increased in each decades, from 9.89%, 15.69% 20.91% to 23.54% respectively. The constituent ratios of different etiologic types of heart diseases changed. Coronary heart disease constituted the largest proportion, next in number was rheumatic heart disease and congenital heart disease was in the third place. The incidence of congenital heart diseases, myocarditis, cardiac dysrhythmias without organic heart diseases, cardiomyopathy and endocarditis increased and that of rheumatic heart disease, pulmonary heart disease and hypertensive heart disease apparently decreased, syphilitic heart disease was rarely encountered.
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PMID:[The trend of changes in etiologic types of heart diseases in Shanghai from 1948 to 1989]. 959 15

Infective endocarditis (IE) is a pathologic condition of native or prosthetic heart valves or endocardium, which may result in valve destruction and congestive heart failure. It occurs more frequently in men than in women, and there is an increased trend in the elderly. The following conditions predispose patients to IE: congenital and rheumatic heart disease, calcification or stenosis of a valve, prosthetic valve surgery, a previous episode of endocarditis, poor dentition, parenteral drug abuse, and placement of intravascular lines or devices. Effective treatment frequently involves a combination of intense antibiotic therapy and surgical repair. Risk of death from IE is related to age over 60, diagnosis of staphylococcal infection, involvement of an aortic or prosthetic valve, and the presence of any of the following sequelae of endocarditis: congestive heart failure, embolic phenomenon, and neurologic deficit. Clinicians should suspect endocarditis in patients presenting with fever of unknown origin and who are at risk for endocarditis. Timely evaluation with transthoracic or transesophageal echocardiography may identify patients in the early stages of endocarditis and direct the patient to definitive therapy. Early treatment of native and prosthetic valve endocarditis may decrease its overall morbidity and mortality. This case study illustrates some of the challenges in effectively managing prosthetic valve endocarditis.
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PMID:Prosthetic valve endocarditis leading to valve replacement: a case study. 988 66

Four hundred and sixty-six patients (277 males, 189 females; mean age 23.2 years) diagnosed as cases of infective endocarditis during the past 15 years were retrospectively analysed. Two-thirds of patients belonged to the 15 to 35 years age group. The most common predisposing cardiac lesion was rheumatic heart disease seen in 73.4 percent patients. Mitral valve prolapse and right-sided endocarditis were infrequent, seen in four patients each. Blood culture positivity was 28.7 percent in adults and 61 percent in children. Commonest organism isolated was staphylococcus aureus in adults (39.3%) and streptococcus viridans in children (48%). Salmonella typhi was detected in 17 patients and showed excellent response to ciprofloxacin and gentamycin. Overall mortality was 13.9 percent and resistant heart failure was the leading cause of death. Our study presents the clinical spectrum of infective endocarditis and highlights the comparison with western studies.
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PMID:Clinical spectrum of infective endocarditis: 15 years experience. 1005 75


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