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Query: UMLS:C0014118 (
endocarditis
)
15,629
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Among 2627 necropsies performed in the Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital, Perth, over a period of 11 years, 16 cases of non-bacterial thrombotic
endocarditis
(NBTE) were found in patients with cancer (13 adenocarcinomas). The final stay in hospital of seven of these patients was complicated by a major embolic cerebral (six patients), or spinal cord (one patient),
stroke
. In all cases, the diagnosis of NBTE was made at necropsy. The aortic valve was affected in 10 patients, the mitral valve in five, and both the mitral and tricuspid valves in one. The diagnosis of NBTE should be considered in any patient with a known, or suspected, malignant neoplasm who suffers a
stroke
or other unexplained embolic events.
...
PMID:Non-bacterial thrombotic endocarditis associated with malignant disease: a clinicopathological study of 16 cases. 400 38
Embolic stroke complicating systemic lupus erythematosus has been infrequently reported. We examined a 25-year-old woman who suddenly became hemiplegic. Two-dimensional echocardiography identified a source of emboli. At cardiac surgery, friable thrombotic vegetations were found adhering to the mitral valve leaflets, left ventricular septal wall, and chordae tendineae. At autopsy several weeks later, careful pathologic examination of the heart failed to reveal evidence of thrombus formation or
endocarditis
. An embolus identical in appearance to the thrombotic vegetations described at cardiac surgery was found lodged in the left middle cerebral artery underlying the recent brain infarction. To our knowledge, this is the first report of embolic
stroke
in systemic lupus erythematosus caused by extensive cardiac thrombus formation in the absence of underlying
endocarditis
.
...
PMID:Embolic stroke complicating systemic lupus erythematosus. 402 19
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)
Stroke
PMID:Value of cardiac monitoring and echocardiography in TIA and stroke patients. 408 26
This paper describes a case of Candida Parapsilosis
endocarditis
in a patient with a mitral valve prosthesis implanted two years previously. This history started with a
cerebrovascular accident
associated with pyrexia. A complex medico-surgical therapeutic approach controlled the infection. This consisted of systemic and local (immersion of the prosthesis) antifungal therapy, bathing the left heart chambers in 5 p. 100 iodine solution and two valve replacements at 8 months intervals. The second surgery was not related to recurrence of the candida infection but to a perivalvular leak attributed to the insertion of the prosthesis into tissues inflamed by recent infection. Despite the improvement in the prognosis of fungal infection due to an early surgical approach, it is still essential to try and prevent the disease, the mortality rate still being over 80 p. 100. It is essential to be very careful when using intravenous catheters and aerosols; the indications of antibiotherapy must also be respected.
...
PMID:[Endocarditis caused by Candida parapsilosis (para-krusei)]. 641 1
We have reviewed our 1972 to 1982 experience with valve procedures for infective
endocarditis
in 52 consecutive patients to evaluate the results of an interdisciplinary policy of early operation for uncontrolled complications. There were 47 patients with native valve
endocarditis
and five with prosthetic valve
endocarditis
. Twenty-seven were drug addicts and 25 were not. Thirty-seven (71%) required operation during the active phase of the disease and 15 during the inactive phase. Ninety-three percent of the addicts, 41% of the nonaddicts, and all patients with prosthetic valve
endocarditis
were in the active group. The distribution of infected valves was as follows: aortic, 21 active and 10 inactive; mitral, six active and three inactive; aortic and mitral, five active and two inactive; aortic and tricuspid, one active and none inactive; and tricuspid, four active and none inactive. Streptococcus was the most common infecting organism in both groups--predominantly group D in addicts and non-D in nonaddicts. Staphylococcus, gram-negative rods, and fungi occurred only in the active group. Indications for operation were congestive heart failure alone (19 active and 15 inactive), congestive heart failure and refractory infection or major emboli (nine active and none inactive), and resistant or refractory infection alone or with emboli (nine active and none inactive). Periannular abscess or aneurysm formation was most frequent at the aortic valve site in patients with native valve
endocarditis
; it occurred in 13 of 25 patients (52%) in the active group and in one of 12 patients (8%) in the inactive group. Six patients with preoperative
stroke
syndromes underwent operation without neurological deterioration; two patients had rupture of cerebral mycotic aneurysms postoperatively. Hospital mortality was 8% (3/7) in the active group and 0% in the inactive group. The late actuarial survival rate was 64% at 5 years and 54% at 10 years. Seven of nine deaths in the addict group were related to continued drug use, with five deaths occurring in the first 18 months. These results support a policy of early operation for uncontrolled complications with attention to the particular problems of active
endocarditis
.
...
PMID:Favorable ten-year experience with valve procedures for active infective endocarditis. 670 72
Four cases of bacterial endocarditis (BE) complicating hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy (HOCM) were observed between 1978 and 1980. The causal organism was a streptococcus in all cases and the portal of entry, dental. The mitral regurgitation (MR) observed in HOCM as an epiphenomenon of the obstruction became autonomous in 2 patients as shown by phonocardiography with methoxamine. In one case, the MR became severe and justified mitral valve replacement; at surgery, the chordal rupture suspected on echocardiography was confirmed. Antibiotic therapy was effective on the infectious process in all cases. However, 2 of the 4 patients died, one of thrombosis of the mitral prosthesis on the 15th postoperative day, and the other of a
cerebrovascular accident
. None of the patients had a detectable aortic or septal infectious lesion. Eight of 27 reported cases (30 p 100) of HOCM complicated by BE were operated; 10 (37 p. 100) died as a result of the
endocarditis
. These cases underline the incidence of BE in HOCM (5 p. 100) its gravity and the necessity for systematic antibiotic prophylaxis, especially before dental treatment.
...
PMID:[Obstructive hypertrophic myocardiopathy and Osler's endocarditis]. 689 94
In a retrospective study of 50 patients with infective
endocarditis
(IE), we found an overall mortality of 44%: among the 26 patients with natural valves (NV) the mortality was 19%; among the 24 with prosthetic valves (PV) it was 71%. Congenital heart disease was recognized in 17 of our cases, with a significant clustering in the NV group (50% vs 17%, p = 0.029); the most frequently encountered malformation was the bicuspid aortic valve. The incidence of rheumatic heart disease was 46% in the NV group and 83% in the PV group (p = 0.015). Manifestations of IE were protean and multisystemic. We calculated an average of 4.6 symptoms and 4.7 signs for each patient. Although sepsis was abated with appropriate antibiotics, death often ensued from multiple complications: congestive heart failure, arrhythmia,
stroke
, embolic myocardial infarction, valvular destruction or dehiscence, coagulopathy. New features of natural valve infective
endocarditis
are a rising incidence in the elderly and a survival rate seemingly at its peak. Features of prosthetic valve infective
endocarditis
include overwhelmingly frequent embolization to the central nervous system (p = 0.004), spleen (p = 0.009) and kidney (p = 0.010). Advances in therapy for this disease may come from early surgery in late prosthetic valve
endocarditis
and from future prospective studies to define how the host response influences the outcome.
...
PMID:Infective endocarditis update experience from a heart hospital. 697 38
In the state of Connecticut, 233 women with congenital heart defects were prospectively followed up through 482 pregnancies that resulted in 372 infants who were examined frequently during their first 3 years of life. Approximately half of the women had undergone cardiac surgery and they were compared with the women without operation. There was no maternal mortality, and no patient had infective
endocarditis
, brain abscess or a
cerebrovascular accident
. The proportion of pregnancies resulting in live births did not differ significantly in mothers with and without cardiac surgery; the average live birth rate was 77 percent in all. However, the number and size of live-born infants was much greater in mothers who had become acyanotic as a result of reparative surgery than in the still cyanotic women, whether or not they had had palliative surgery. In cyanotic women, placental size was abnormally large in relation to birth weight, which was abnormally low. When the mothers were classified according to cardiac function, there was a significant difference between the number of infants born alive to mothers in good to excellent status and the number born to mothers in fair to poor condition. The latter had a significant increase in interrupted pregnancies as well as in cardiovascular complications during pregnancy. The total group had a 16.1 percent incidence rate of infants with congenital heart disease. This rate was corrected to 14.2 percent by removal of seven mothers, two with Noonan's syndrome, one with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and four with a family history of congenital heart defects.
...
PMID:Pregnancy and its outcome in women with and without surgical treatment of congenital heart disease. 711 41
Sixty-five patients with a bleeding disorder and coexistent neurologic abnormalities were examined over a 4-year period to determine: (1) the CNS pathology due to disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC); (2) the clinical setting in which CNS dysfunction due to DIC occurs; and (3) the neurologic complications of DIC as opposed to those patients dying with concurrent DIC. Criteria for inclusion in the study were the combination of: (1) a neurologic disorder in a patient with clinical evidence of a bleeding disorder; and (2) evidence of DIC by laboratory criteria or the detection of fibrin thrombi in multiple organs at postmortem. Twenty-four of 65 patients met these diagnostic criteria, including 14 men and 10 women, aged 24 to 84 years. Autopsies were obtained in 17 patients. These patients were divided into two groups Group I consisted of 10 patients with evidence of cerebral bleeding or infarction at the onset of DIC. Group II consisted of 14 patients who met the diagnostic criteria for DIC but did not demonstrate postmortem evidence of hemorrhage or infarction in the brain. Patients with malignancy who present with findings suggestive of a large-vessel
stroke
are likely to have DIC and nonbacterial thrombotic
endocarditis
. The most common neurologic complications of DIC are large vessel occlusion, obtundation and coma, subarachnoid hemorrhage, and multiple cortical and brainstem hemorrhages and infarction.
...
PMID:Neurologic complications of disseminated intravascular coagulation. 720 75
The recent availability of two-dimensional echocardiography (2DE) has fostered the expectation that cardiac embolic sources could be identified or excluded with certitude in ischemic
stroke
patients. As a screening procedure, 2DE has had a low yield. In selected patients, 2DE holds promise as a useful diagnostic test.
Stroke
patients who may benefit from 2DE include patients under age 45, patients with suspected left atrial myxoma, and patients with known infective
endocarditis
, prosthetic heart valves, or rheumatic valvular heart disease. In patients with ischemic heart disease, the yield of useful information from 2DE will be low but may, on occasion, influence management.
...
PMID:Indications for echocardiography in patients with ischemic stroke. 720 47
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