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Query: UMLS:C0014118 (
endocarditis
)
15,629
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Five years prior to presentation, a 29-year-old woman received a transvenous pacemaker (DDD) for
sick sinus syndrome
and nodo-hisian pathology. After pacemaker insertion, she complained of recurrent febrile episodes. Her pacemaker related
endocarditis
was quite unusual for the infecting organism (a micrococcus) and for an acquired tricuspid valve stenosis. The suspected cause was confirmed at surgery.
...
PMID:Right-sided infective endocarditis with acquired tricuspid valve stenosis associated with transvenous pacemaker: a case report. 171 45
One hundred and eighty-four consecutive patients admitted to an Investigative Stroke Unit with transient ischemic attacks (TIA) and cerebral infarction (stroke) had 48-hour automated arrhythmia monitoring, 55 patients had additional Holter monitoring and 127 patients had 2-D echocardiography. One hundred and sixteen presented with stroke (63%) and 68 patients with TIA (37%). One hundred and twenty-two were men (66.3%) and 62 were women (33.7%), mean age 63.5 years, range 25-86. The monitoring identified twelve (6.5%) patients with significant arrhythmias undetected by history, examination and admission electrocardiogram: six with atrial fibrillation (AF), four with 2 degrees heart block type Mobitz II and one each with 3 degrees heart block and
sick sinus syndrome
. Two-D echocardiography showed a previously unknown potential source for cardiac emboli in 22 patients (17.3%): segmental ventricular disease in eleven, mitral valve prolapse in seven, left ventricular thrombus in six, left ventricular aneurysm in three and one each with mitral valve
endocarditis
and global myocardial dysfunction. Only the mitral valve findings were expected on the basis of a previous M-mode echocardiographic study carried out in our city on healthy elderly volunteers. From the clinical history and all cardiac investigations, we found 59 patients (32%) with a possible cardiac source for cerebral emboli. After cerebral angiography, 29 of these 59 patients also showed a vascular lesion in the appropriate carotid artery and we could not decide definitely which lesion was responsible for the cerebral embolus. In the remaining 30 patients (16.4%), the evidence implicated the heart as the most likely source.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Value of cardiac monitoring and echocardiography in TIA and stroke patients. 408 26
The study comprises 10 consecutive medicolegal autopsies of patients treated with intraventricular cardiac pacing who died unexpectedly outside of a hospital. The treatment was indicated by AV-block grade I-III in eight cases, by bradyarrhythmia in one case, and
sick sinus syndrome
in the last case. Four patients died during a sudden epileptiform seizure, three were found dead, and three died in their sleep. Recent hemorrhages close to the AV-node and His bundle were seen in five cases. The local findings in the vicinity of the pacemaker leads were numerous and multiple consisting of thrombosis of the superior vena cava, tortuous and corroded leads, leads attached to the atrial endocardium, constricted orifice of the coronary sinus, and acute ulcerations,
endocarditis
, shrinking, and ruptures of the cusps of the tricuspid valve. The right atrium of the pacemaker patients was significantly dilated. The mean value of the ratios between right atrial and ventricular length (AV ratio) of the 10 pacemaker patients was 1.2 in contrast to the mean value of the same ratio of 30 controls, which was 0.6. The AV ratio was particularly increased in patients with lesions of the tricuspid valve and with a long history of cardiac pacing. In 3 of the 10 patients the immediate cause of death was related to anatomical and technical complications of long-term intraventricular pacing. Such complications were clinically unrecognized thrombosis of the superior vena cava, rupture of the chordae tendinae, and cable breakage.
...
PMID:Postmortem findings and possible causes of unexpected death in patients treated with intraventricular pacing. 619 10
In a 49-year-old woman with
sick sinus syndrome
and a permanent VVI pacemaker, severe tricuspid stenosis and its clinical consequences developed 4 years after the attack of
endocarditis
. Besides the quite unusual occurrence of lead related tricuspid stenosis, successful treatment with balloon dilatation is the unique feature of this case.
...
PMID:Predominant tricuspid stenosis secondary to bacterial endocarditis in a patient with permanent pacemaker and balloon dilatation of the stenosis. 1008 61
A 60-year-old man, who had undergone implantation of a transvenous pacemaker system on the left chest wall for
sick sinus syndrome
19 years ago, was admitted because of
endocarditis
with septicemia and lung abscess 2 months after reimplantation of the generator. His blood culture revealed Staphylococcus aureus. Following debridement of the infected pacemaker pocket and antibiotics therapy, we tried to remove the pacemaker system under cardiopulmonary bypass 1 month after admission. In intraoperative inspection, the electrodes had become firmly encased with fibrous tissue within the tricuspid valve and the right ventricle. After the operation, antibiotic therapy was performed for 4 weeks. His postoperative course was uneventful. Patients with pacemaker infection should undergo aggressive total removal of the pacemaker system, particularly incase with
endocarditis
and bacteremia.
...
PMID:[Total removal of infected pacemaker lead under cardiopulmonary bypass in a case of endocarditis, bacteremia and lung abscess]. 1135 11
Infective endocarditis related to pacemaker is a rare but serious condition in permanent venous tracing. A 65-year-old man was admitted to the hospital with high fever and chills. A DDD pacemaker had been implanted via the right subclavian vein because of
sick sinus syndrome
6 years earlier. Transesophageal echocardiogram identified an oscillating round hyperechoic mass with a stalk near the tricuspid valve. Blood cultures grew Staphylococcus hominis. The patient was treated with antibiotics and operated on after the acute phase of the illness had subsided. We hereby report a case of lead
endocarditis
caused by S. hominis in a patient with pacemaker, which has been rarely reported in the English literature.
...
PMID:Pacemaker lead endocarditis caused by Staphylococcus hominis. 1668 53
Situs ambiguous is rare congenital anomaly in adults. In 2 adult patients who admitted for different cardiac problems, situs ambiguous with polysplenia was detected. A 42-year-old male admitted for radio frequent catheter ablation of atrial fibrillation, and he had left-sided inferior vena cava (IVC), hepatic segment of IVC interruption with hemiazygos continuation, multiple spleens and intestinal malrotation. And in a 52-year-old female case who was hospitalized due to infective
endocarditis
after implanting pacemaker for
sick sinus syndrome
, multiple spleens, left-sided stomach, bilateral liver with midline gallbladder, and left-sided IVC were found. Those findings were consistent with situs ambiguous with polysplenia, but their features were distinctive.
...
PMID:Incidentally detected situs ambiguous in adults. 2225 67
A 57-year-old man underwent mitral valve replacement and tricuspid annuloplasty for mitral and tricuspid regurgitation. Pacemaker implantation was conducted because of postoperative
sick sinus syndrome
2 months after the operation. One year later, the patient was readmitted to the hospital because of high fever. Echocardiography showed 2 vegetations of 10 mm in diameter attached to the mitral mechanical valve. No vegetations were detected on the tricuspid valve or the pacemaker leads. Mitral valve re-replacement was urgently performed under the diagnosis of prosthetic valve
endocarditis
caused by Staphylococcus aureus. One month after the reoperation, pacemaker infection developed in spite of suitable infection control by daily intravenous injection of sensitive antibiotics. We proceeded to place a temporary pacing wire and extracted the entire permanent pacing system. A new permanent pacemaker was implanted 5 days later. The patient was discharged on the 62th postoperative day without recurrence of infection.
...
PMID:[Pacemaker infection developed one month after the surgery for prosthetic valve endocarditis]. 2237 99
A 23-year-old male who had a VDDR pacemaker implanted seven years ago due to
sick sinus syndrome
and recurrent syncope episodes was admitted with symptoms of dyspnea, fever, and tachycardia, which were present for a few days. He was suspected to be suffering from pneumonia and underwent computed tomography scanning of the thorax, which revealed widespread infiltration in the lung parenchyma and pulmonary emboli. Transthoracic echocardiography revealed an extremely mobile echogenic structure in the right atrium, which was determined to be the free portion of a ruptured pacemaker lead. There was an overlying thrombus and/or vegetation-like organized soft tissue within the right ventricle around the lead component. In this article, the rupture of a permanent pacemaker lead, which complicated the course of infective
endocarditis
associated with pulmonary embolism and pneumonia is reported. We hypothesize that the underlying mechanism for the rupture is soft tissue entrapment within the right ventricle. Unfortunately, this rare and life-threatening situation led to the death of our patient after the surgical removal of the device and its components.
...
PMID:Rupture of a pacemaker lead during the course of infective endocarditis. 2351 39
A 67-year-old female was evaluated in the out-patient clinic because of shortness of breath on exertion and regular spells of fever. She had been taking ergotamine tartrate to treat migraine for more than 30 years. The patient had undergone aortic-valve replacement for aortic insufficiency three years before. On echocardiographic evaluation, severe retraction and insufficiency of the remaining native heart valves was demonstrated.
Endocarditis
and carcinoid syndrome were excluded. The mitral, tricuspid and pulmonary valves were all replaced by a mechanical valvular prosthesis. Pathological-anatomical evaluation of the three replaced valves and the aortic valve replaced three years earlier disclosed identical findings, compatible with long-term ergotamine use. Nine months after surgery, a
sick sinus syndrome
developed necessitating implantation of a DDDR pacemaker with a right atrial and a coronary sinus lead. Functional class according to the New York Heart Association improved from class III to I. After stopping the ergotamine, the fever disappeared. However, the migraine spells reoccurred which are now being treated with paracetamol.
...
PMID:A patient with four artificial heart valves after ergotamine therapy. 2569 86
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