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

A review of 1343 autopsies on patients over the age of 40 years revealed 142 patients with calcification of the mitral annulus fibrosus, representing 10.6% of the studied population. Sixteen patients (11.3%) had systemic calcareous embolization. Eight patients showed clinical symptoms reflecting embolization, while the others did not. Three of the patients with clinical manifestations had been admitted to the hospital with a history of a fall and two of these, whose postmortem examination included the brain, showed focal meningitis due to embolization from an infected calcified mitral annulus fibrosus. Another three patients had been admitted to the hospital with a clinical diagnosis of cerebral vascular accident and were found to have focal ischemic necrosis or large cerebral infarcts. These were the result of either calcareous or bland embolization from a thrombus superimposed on an ulcerated calcified annulus. Eight of the 16 patients with calcareous embolization also had had sepsis, six attributable to infective endocarditis complicating the calcified mitral annulus fibrosus. This study suggests the relatively frequent occurrence of spontaneous calcareous embolization from an ulcerated calcified mitral annulus fibrosus in older adults.
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PMID:Calcification of the mitral annulus fibrosus with systemic embolization. A clinicopathologic study of 16 cases. 356 71

Two cases of non-bacterial thrombotic endocarditis are described associated with stroke. This is followed by discussion of the pathophysiology of the disorder.
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PMID:Non-bacterial thrombotic endocarditis and stroke. 358 1

The authors report two cases of endocarditis secondary to Streptobacillus moniliformis. A 41 year-old man, bitten by a rat, is hospitalized 5 weeks later for an endocarditis demonstrated by echocardiography, with massive aortic escape and hemodynamic failure requiring emergency valve replacement: after a favorable course, the patient dies suddenly 4 months later. A 63 year-old woman is admitted for a septicemic syndrome with sterno-clavicular arthritis which occurred 10 days after a rat bite; followed by a transient ischemic cerebral vascular accident; echocardiogram shows a clubshaped bulge of the distal end of the large mitral valve; the course is uneventful under antibiotherapy. In both cases, blood cultures isolate a Streptobacillus moniliformis. Infections secondary to Streptobacillus moniliformis are rare; this Gram negative bacillus, saprophyte of the rat's rhinopharynx, is transmitted to man, most of the time, by bite, and this causes a septicemia, the evolution of which is usually favorable. Complications, especially endocarditis, are exceptionally rare: only 12 cases are found in the world's literature. The evolution is always fatal in the absence of treatment which must include the association penicillin-aminoside. Prophylaxis of this disease is provided by penicillin antibiotherapy which should be systematic after a rodent's bite.
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PMID:[Streptobacillus moniliformis endocarditis. Apropos of 2 cases]. 361 83

Patients undergoing open heart surgery who have had recent cardiogenic embolic stroke or have central nervous system dysfunction pose a difficult management problem. There is always the risk that cardiopulmonary bypass and heparinization may exacerbate the neurologic injury. There is no clear data indicating what is a safe interval of time from the onset of neurologic symptoms to the time of surgery. Since 1982 we have operated on 15 patients with recent (2 to 28 days, mean 12.7 +/- 7.9 days) neurologic injury. Indications for surgery included recurrent embolization, sepsis, and hemodynamic deterioration. Three patients were comatose with no focal neurologic signs at the time of surgery, and 12 patients had focal neurologic deficits. All patients had preoperative computed tomographic scans. Embolic cerebral infarctions were documented in 12 patients, one patient had evidence of intracranial hemorrhage, and one patient had a subdural hematoma. Fourteen patients had native or prosthetic valvular endocarditis and one patient had a left atrial myxoma. All patients underwent corrective cardiac surgery. One patient died in the postoperative period from multisystem failure; all other patients have been followed since discharge (6 months to 4 years). All surviving patients demonstrated improvement in their neurologic symptoms and eight patients had complete neurologic recovery. The results of this study indicate that open heart surgery can be safely performed in patients with recent neurologic injury.
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PMID:Results of open heart surgery in patients with recent cardiogenic embolic stroke and central nervous system dysfunction. 366 7

The clinical and pathologic findings in 42 autopsy proved cases of cerebral infarction from cancer-associated non-bacterial thrombotic endocarditis were reviewed. Carcinoma of the lung was the most common malignancy. Most patients had disseminated cancer, but in six patients, the condition was stable or in remission, and six patients had localized cancer; two patients were not known to have cancer until neurologic symptoms developed. Neurologic symptoms were focal, suggesting stroke in 18; diffuse, suggesting metabolic encephalopathy in nine; and mixed in five. Neurologic signs were often the only evidence of thromboembolism. The definitive diagnostic test was cerebral angiography showing multiple arterial occlusions. Anticoagulation with heparin appeared to help some patients and did not promote brain hemorrhage. Early diagnosis and vigorous treatment of non-bacterial endocarditis may prevent severe neurologic disability.
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PMID:Cerebral infarction from non-bacterial thrombotic endocarditis. Clinical and pathological study including the effects of anticoagulation. 367 60

Analysis of 17 patients with infective endocarditis and intracranial hemorrhage yielded several different mechanisms of bleeding. Nine of 15 (60%) symptomatic intracranial hemorrhages occurred within 48 hours of admission and 3 more (20%) after hospital discharge. In 7 patients with Staphylococcus aureus endocarditis, symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage occurred within 48 hours of admission and resulted from septic arteritis in all 3 examined pathologically. Secondary hemorrhagic transformation (hemorrhagic infarction) was asymptomatic in 2 nonanticoagulated patients but was associated with clinical worsening in 2 anticoagulated patients. Anticoagulation potentially contributed to intracranial hemorrhage in 4 of the 17 patients (24%). Proven mycotic aneurysms were present in only 2 patients (12%), 1 of whom presented with massive, fatal intracranial hemorrhage. Mycotic aneurysms amenable to surgery are uncommon and underlie only a fraction of intracranial hemorrhages in infective endocarditis.
Stroke
PMID:Mechanisms of intracranial hemorrhage in infective endocarditis. 368 76

We compared the clinical course of 68 patients with infective endocarditis and mycotic aneurysm and 147 patients with infective endocarditis but no mycotic aneurysm. Among the patients with mycotic aneurysm, 57% had subarachnoid hemorrhage without warning. Forty-three percent had a neurologic prodrome 2 days to 18 months (median 17 days) prior to discovery of the mycotic aneurysm. A focal deficit consistent with embolism was the most common prodrome (23%). However, there was no significant difference in the frequency of neurologic symptoms between patients with and without mycotic aneurysm. During an average follow-up of 40 months, there were no instances of subarachnoid hemorrhage/mycotic aneurysm among 121 patients discharged after a full course of antibiotic therapy. Therefore, the risk of rupture of an unsuspected mycotic aneurysm following a full course of antibiotics is low. When a prodrome does precede a mycotic aneurysm, it most often is a focal deficit consistent with embolism. We favor angiography in all patients with infective endocarditis who experience a focal deficit with good recovery. The timing and other indications for angiography in infective endocarditis are discussed.
Stroke
PMID:Mycotic aneurysm, subarachnoid hemorrhage, and indications for cerebral angiography in infective endocarditis. 368 77

In a retrospective study the reports of 211 cases of cardiogenic cerebral embolism--diagnosed on the base of neurological and cardiological findings--were analyzed in view of signs and findings of prognostic value. There were 21 patients with TIA, 39 cases of RIND and 151 patients with cerebral infarction, 60 of which showed mild and 91 severe neurological symptoms. 38 patients died during the period of hospitalization. While sex of the patients as well as vascular risk factors (hypertension, diabetes mellitus, cigarette smoking) did not influence the clinical course of the disease, patients with TIA or RIND in general were younger (about 5 years) than those with severe stroke. Prognosis of cardiogenic cerebral embolism depended to a great degree on the underlying heart disease. Cerebral embolism after myocardial infarction showed a better remission of symptoms than embolism in atrial fibrillation. In the group of valvular diseases the course of embolic strokes in mitral lesions was worse than in aortal valve disease. Prognosis was worst in endocarditis, both in view of neurological deficit and of mortality. Mostly, the cardiogenic emboli lead to infarctions of the middle cerebral artery territory (78 per cent) with a predilection for the left hemisphere. In media-syndromes the clinical course was significantly worse in patients with additional homonymous visual defect compared to incomplete infarctions. Initial disturbance of conscience reduced prognosis quoad vitam et restitutionem significantly. Of the neuroradiological findings, the detection of arterial occlusion or circulatory disturbance in angiography as well as the finding of an ischemic lesion in computed axial tomography (CAT) was correlated with a severe course of the embolic stroke. While 7 patients with hemorrhagic infarction in CAT-Scan showed no differences in the clinical course, the 14 patients with pathological cerebral spinal fluid findings in embolism had an unfavourable prognosis. The development of epileptic seizures did not influence the further course of the infarction to a significant extent. Results are compared with the current world literature.
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PMID:[Prognosis of cardiogenic cerebral embolism]. 374 66

42 patients aged up to 35 years who had suffered a stroke were analysed according to etio-pathogenetic and prognostic criteria. The cause of the stroke could be explained with certainty only in ten patients and with high probability in a further eight. In a quarter of the cases the aetiology was completely obscure. Diagnostic gaps exist especially in haemostatic, virological and cardiological areas. Three patients died from the stroke. Follow-up showed that 40% of patients were able to resume their previous occupation. Relapses were observed in cases with disseminated lupus erythematosus and endocarditis. The relatively low rate of clarified cases (42%) is partly due to selection but also to the gaps in diagnostic knowledge. Accordingly, a stepwise diagnostic program was set up, based upon urgency and technical expenditure, that took into account not only the minimal needs for a sound initial diagnosis but also the extensive differential diagnoses for less common causes of stroke.
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PMID:[Diagnosis of stroke in young adults]. 390 37

Whether total surgical correction of tetralogy of Fallot in adults aged 40 years old or older has acceptable operative risk and gratifying long-term results is unknown. The Mayo Clinic experience (June 1960 to May 1982) with 30 patients 40 to 60 years old (mean 47) who had total surgical correction of tetralogy of Fallot was reviewed. Preoperatively, 4 patients (13%) were in functional class I, 9 (30%) in class II and 17 (57%) in classes III and IV. Eight patients (27%) had had preoperative complications: five had a cerebrovascular accident and three had infective endocarditis. Only 11 patients (37%) had had palliative surgery 16 to 34 years (mean 22) before total surgical correction. Total surgical correction was successful in all patients. Right ventricular to left ventricular (RV/LV) pressure ratio of 0.65 or less was achieved in 28 (93%) of the 30 patients. One patient died of ventricular fibrillation (RV/LV ratio = 0.8) 2 days postoperatively, one had complete heart block and one had a cerebrovascular accident 7 days after operation. At follow-up of 5 to 266 months (mean 110), there were seven late deaths: two sudden at 5 and 21 years, respectively, after operation, one from myocardial infarction at 11 years, one from cerebrovascular accident at 11 years, one from congestive heart failure (RV/LV ratio = 1.0) at 8 years and two from noncardiac causes. Of the 22 patients who survived, 16 are in class I, 5 are in class II and 1 is in class III.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Total correction of tetralogy of Fallot at age 40 years and older: long-term follow-up. 396 7


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