Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0014118 (endocarditis)
15,629 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

From 1975 to 1989, 307 consecutive episodes of infective endocarditis were diagnosed in our hospital. Of those, 35 were cases of late prosthetic valve endocarditis, defined as those occurring after 12 months of valvular replacement. Blood cultures grew streptococci in 15 patients (43 percent), staphylococci in seven (20 percent), enterococci in five (14 percent), Gram-negative bacilli of HACEK group in four (11.5 percent), and Candida in one. Blood cultures were negative in three cases (prosthetic infection was confirmed at surgery). Heart failure due to prosthetic dysfunction occurred in seven patients (20 percent) and emboli in 12 (34 percent). Early valvular replacement was performed in six patients (17 percent). Complications and mortality were dependent on the infective agent. Overall mortality was 23 percent, no death occurred from streptococcal infection, whereas mortality with endocarditis by organisms of the HACEK group and Staphylococcus was 50 percent and 43 percent, respectively. During a mean follow-up of five years, 11 patients (those with prosthetic leaks diagnosed during the active infection and patients with biologic prostheses) required surgery. There was one relapse in a patient with staphylococcal endocarditis and one recurrence, six years after the initial episode. We conclude that immediate prognosis of late prosthetic valve endocarditis depends on the infective agent. Although the immediate prognosis of streptococcal infections is good, the need for early reoperation during follow-up due to progressive perivalvular leak is high. Also, it appears that deterioration of bioprostheses proceeds swiftly after the cure of infection.
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PMID:Late prosthetic valve endocarditis. Immediate and long-term prognosis. 172 6

The object of the study was to follow patients with endocarditis-associated abscesses in order to evaluate the clinical outcome with and without surgical intervention. Transesophageal echocardiography successfully displayed the location and extent of abscess cavities in 14 patients (group A) with aortic valve endocarditis. The infective process was limited to the perivalvular tissue in two, extended into the ascending aorta in six, and included the interventricular septum, the right ventricular outflow tract, interatrial septum, and/or mitral valve annulus in six patients. The complication rate was significantly higher in group A than in group B, which consisted of 27 patients with proven signs of endocarditis but without endocarditis-associated abscesses. The complication rates were embolic events 64.3% in group A vs 29.6% in group B, need for surgery in 64.3% vs 18.5%, and death in 50.0% vs 3.7%, respectively. The duration of fever--as a marker of an active infective process--before diagnosis and the onset of adequate treatment was significantly higher in group A than in group B (46.7 +/- 8.4 days vs 7.7 +/- 2.6 days). Organisms were isolated in 71.4% in group A and in all patients of group B. Streptococcal infections were noted in A in 54.5% vs 44.4% in B., staphylococcal in 27.3% vs 40.7%. Initial surgical repair in 9 of 14 patients in A (64.3%) included nine aortic valve and one mitral valve prosthesis implantations, two aortic valve-annulus reconstructive procedures, one dacron patch closure, and three partial resections of the aorta ascendens with end-to-end anastomosis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Identification of abscess formation in native-valve infective endocarditis using transesophageal echocardiography: implications for surgical treatment. 178 14

Glomerulonephritis may complicate infections due to various microorganisms. These microorganisms are bacterial, fungal, viral or parasitic. Considerable clinical and experimental evidence has accumulated to indicate that glomerular injury is due to in situ immune complex deposition. In France, renal lesions are more often due to focal skin infection and sinus or visceral abscesses, with or without endocarditis, rather than to pharyngeal streptococcal infection. Staphylococcal infections are a frequent cause, especially in intravenous illicit drug users. Recovery requires suppression of the infective agent. However, in severe forms, after initial acute glomerular damage the evolution may be characterized by the development of chronic glomerulonephritis.
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PMID:[Glomerulonephritis of infectious origin]. 180 54

Anterior segment necrosis following ocular infections and endophthalmitis secondary to group C streptococcal infection are both rare. We report a case of unilateral anterior segment necrosis associated with bilateral metastatic group C streptococcal endophthalmitis in a 68-year-old black man with multiple systemic disorders complicated by culture-confirmed group C streptococcal septicemia and endocarditis. Pathological examination of the left eye at autopsy demonstrated necrosis of the anterior segment involving the cornea, iris, lens and ciliary body. The right eye showed signs of mild residual inflammation. To our knowledge anterior segment necrosis has not previously been described in association with group C streptococcal endophthalmitis.
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PMID:Anterior segment necrosis associated with endogenous endophthalmitis secondary to group C streptococcal septicemia. 193 69

Three patients with Group G Streptococcal infection presenting with endocarditis and septicaemia are reported. All had underlying cardiac disease, and one had diabetes mellitus and a colonic carcinoma. Our three patients responded to intravenous crystalline penicillin.
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PMID:Group G streptococcal endocarditis and bacteraemia--a report of 3 cases. 225 41

Open heart surgery (patch closure of the defect and tricuspid valvuloplasty with DeVega's annuloplasty) has been successfully performed on 35-year-old woman who has had a history of VSD closure and was undergoing hemodialysis. The patient has also been under treatment for active endocarditis due to streptococcal infection. Hemofiltration method was used during cardiopulmonary bypass. We describe our experience and discuss the management of the problems in this case.
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PMID:[A case of recanalization of LV-RA communication associated with tricuspid regurgitation complicating active endocarditis in chronic renal failure]. 229 54

Our experience with group C streptococcal infection over the past 15 years demonstrates an important and emerging role for this hemolytic organism as an opportunistic and nosocomial pathogen. Significant risk factors in this predominantly male population included chronic cardiopulmonary disease, diabetes, malignancy, and alcoholism. Bacteremia occurred in 74% of cases seen in our series. Nosocomial acquisition of infection was observed in 26%, and infection was frequently polymicrobial in nature with gram-negative enteric bacilli isolated most commonly along with group C streptococci. We observed a broad spectrum of infections including puerperal sepsis, pleuropulmonary infections, skin and soft-tissue infection, central nervous system infection, endocarditis, urinary tract infection, and pharyngeal infections. Several cases of bacteremia of unknown source were observed in neutropenic patients with underlying leukemia. New syndromes of infection due to group C streptococci observed in our series included intra-abdominal abscess, epidural abscess, and dialysis-associated infection. Response to therapy and outcome was related to the underlying disease. While the literature suggests that patients with group C endocarditis respond better to synergistic penicillin-aminoglycoside regimens, patient numbers are too small to draw definite conclusions. The clinical significance of antibiotic tolerant group C streptococci remains uncertain. In patients with serious group C infections including endocarditis, meningitis, septic arthritis, or bacteremia in neutropenic hosts, we advocate the initial use of cell-wall-acting agents in combination with an aminoglycoside.
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PMID:Infections due to Lancefield group C streptococci. 266 62

Group B Streptococcal bacteraemia seldom behaves as a pyrexia of unknown origin (PUO) except in the context of infective endocarditis. Scleroderma is not known to predispose to Group B streptococcal infection. We report a case of Group B streptococcal bacteraemia presenting as a PUO in a patient with probable scleroderma in whom there was no evidence of endocarditis.
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PMID:Group B streptococcal infection as a pyrexia of unknown origin. 267 2

We reviewed fourty-six patients who had undergone surgery for infective endocarditis in the past fifteen years and identified risk factors affecting the outcome. Twenty-nine patients had infection of the native valve only, 11 had infective endocarditis associated with congenital heart disease, and 6 had prosthetic valve endocarditis. Overall hospital mortality was 6.5%. Prosthetic valve endocarditis carried a higher mortality (33%) than native valve endocarditis (3.4% or congenital heart disease with infective endocarditis (0%). For the patients with active endocarditis, the early mortality rate was higher (13%) than with inactive endocarditis (3.2%). Staphylococcal infections were more likely to cause severe valve destruction and residual infection than streptococcal infection. Our results indicated that surgical management of infective endocarditis should be done after the completion of adequate antibiotic therapy. Early diagnosis should reduce the mortality, prevent fatal complications, and lead to qualitative improvement of infective endocarditis.
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PMID:[Surgical management of infective endocarditis]. 274 10

From January 1980 to June 1987, a total of 16 consecutive patients underwent surgical therapy in addition to an antimicrobial regimen for prosthetic valve endocarditis at the National Taiwan University Hospital. The ages ranged from 26 to 55 years, with a mean of 40. Nine of these 16 patients (56%) were men and 7 (44%) women. The infected valve prostheses were located at the aortic position in 5 patients, at the mitral position in 6 patients and at both mitral and aortic position in 5 patients. Among the total of 21 infected valve prostheses, 19 were bioprosthetic tissue valves and only 2 were mechanical valve prostheses. Hospital death occurred in 5 patients with an early mortality rate of 31%. Among them, 1 had fungal infection, 2 had streptococcal infection, and 2 had enterococcal infection. Four patients died of low cardiac output due to extensive myocardial involvement and one patient died of uncontrollable upper gastrointestinal bleeding. Late mortality occurred in 1 patient with fungal endocarditis and the cause of death was clinical deterioration due to multiple organ failure. The follow-up period ranged from 7 to 93 months. Except for one who was lost to follow-up, all of the patients survived in good condition without any complication.
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PMID:Surgical treatment of prosthetic valve endocarditis. 275 17


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