Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0014118 (
endocarditis
)
15,629
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We report a case of Trichosporon beigelii
endocarditis
in a 77-year-old diabetic man who presented with an embolic
stroke
8 years ago after a porcine aortic valve replacement. He was treated successfully with amphotericin, rifampin, and replacement of the original porcine valve; however, he died suddenly 8 months later from unknown causes. Blood cultures 2 months prior to death were negative. The first manifestation of the
endocarditis
was a left hemiparesis followed some days later by a splenic infarction. Transthoracic echocardiography failed to demonstrate the aortic vegetation, which was clearly visualized subsequently by transesophageal echocardiography. The literature on Trichosporon beigelii
endocarditis
is reviewed.
...
PMID:A case of Trichosporon beigelii endocarditis 8 years after aortic valve replacement. 818 73
Cocaine abuse is widespread in North America. It is estimated that almost one in every four Americans has used cocaine at least once in his/her lifetime. In the past two decades, cocaine related cardiovascular complications have mushroomed because cocaine has become cheaper and more readily available. The fundamental effects of cocaine on cardiovascular system are similar to those observed following an intense, sympathetic stimulation. Cocaine intake results in marked increase in blood pressure, myocardial oxygen demand and heart rate. Coronary blood flow, which increases in response to exercise (endogenous sympathetic stimulation) however, is decreased by cocaine intake. Increased demand of oxygen by the myocardium in the face of decreased supply in subjects with cocaine use, leads to myocardial ischemia, which in turn forms a substrate for most of the cardiovascular complications, namely, myocardial infarction, cardiac arrhythmias and acute pulmonary edema. Hypertension related complications, dissection and rupture of aortic aneurysm, hemorrhagic
stroke
, in addition to infective
endocarditis
, myocarditis, cardiomyopathy all occur more frequently in cocaine addicts. In this review, pertinent clinical pharmacology and cardiovascular risks associated with cocaine abuse are presented.
...
PMID:Cardiovascular effects of cocaine abuse. 829 63
Stroke
in patients with cancer is different in terms of its etiology from
stroke
in the general population. Clinicians should be altered to the possibility of non-bacterial thrombotic
endocarditis
(NBTE), associated coagulopathy, and viable treatment options. We review the case of a 42-year-old woman with cerivcal carcinoma and no risk factors for
stroke
who suddenly developed difficulty with speech and right-sided sensory changes. Her complete work-up and course are addressed.
...
PMID:The diagnosis and treatment of stroke in a patient with cancer: nonbacterial thrombotic endocarditis (NBTE): a case report and review. 829 90
The calcified aortic valve has been associated with being a possible source of emboli in cardioembolic
stroke
. However, thrombus on the calcified aortic valve has not been identified with two-dimensional echocardiography. A seventy-two-year-old woman with calcified aortic stenosis was admitted with brain embolism. She had not previously received any platelet antiaggregant or anticoagulant. At admission, two-dimensional echocardiography demonstrated a mobile string-like abnormal echo attached to the calcified aortic valve, which showed regression and enlargement repeatedly during admission. No symptoms or clinical data suggested infective
endocarditis
or nonbacterial thrombotic
endocarditis
. After commencement of antiplatelet therapy, the abnormal echo regressed and disappeared. She continued to take the medication for seven months and then discontinued. Three months later, she developed recurrence of
stroke
, and an abnormal echo on the calcified aortic valve was again detected by two-dimensional echocardiography. The authors believe that the abnormal echo on the calcified aortic valve was thrombus and that it was the embolic source. Calcified aortic valve may thus be a causative lesion for mobile string-like thrombus. Two-dimensional echocardiography should be performed repeatedly in patients with calcified aortic valve and brain embolism.
...
PMID:Mobile string-like thrombus on the calcified aortic valve in cardioembolic stroke--a case report. 834 83
Illicit drugs, appetite suppressants, decongestants, and anabolic steroids may cause
stroke
. Drug abuse is a common cause of
stroke
in young patients. Mechanisms are varied, but it is particularly important to seek out infective
endocarditis
and most importantly, cerebral aneurysms, vascular malformations, and cardiac disorders in cocaine abusers. Drug-induced vasoconstriction, hypertension, or vasculitis probably contributes significantly to most patients' strokes. Tobacco smoking and heavy chronic alcohol consumption are independent risk factors for
stroke
; moderate drinking seems to protect from
stroke
in white patients. Oral contraceptives may increase the risk of
stroke
in female patients over 35 years of age who also have other risk factors.
...
PMID:Stroke. 837 44
A decrease in levels of circulating anticoagulant protein C has been shown to occur following autologous BMT, and this deficiency may contribute to a hypercoagulable state placing patients at risk for thromboembolic events. We report four patients who suffered a variety of thrombotic complications following BMT (non-bacterial thrombotic
endocarditis
, superior vena cava thrombosis, thrombotic
stroke
, purpura fulminans, small bowel infarction secondary to diffuse microvascular thrombosis), which were preceded by or temporally related to decreased levels of protein C. Treatment with fresh frozen plasma (FFP) led to slight, temporary increases in protein C levels but infusions of FFP did not prevent either death or extension of the thrombus in these four cases, suggesting the need for higher protein C doses and/or concomitant anticoagulation. Though no direct causal relationship between these thrombotic complications and the protein C deficiency can be proved, a generalized hypercoagulable state caused by protein C deficiency may have contributed to the development, severity or progression of these complications.
...
PMID:Thrombotic complications of BMT: association with protein C deficiency. 843 11
The Ross operation has been performed for more than 25 years and its popularity has increased dramatically in recent years. We developed an interest in this procedure through a combination of a basic dissatisfaction with a device that requires life-long anticoagulation and the belief that a vital, autologous tissue valve with normal valve morphology and hemodynamics would prove to be superior to the mechanical valve, and that these advantages would outweigh the potential drawbacks related to the operation's technical difficulty and the risk of autograft or homograft dysfunction. From December 1992 to November 1994 40 Ross operations as total root replacements in a diverse group of patients between 5 and 72 years of age (median 32) were performed at Rigshospitalet. Seventeen (43%) of the patients had undergone at least one previous open heart operation. Eleven patients (28%) required surgery because of ongoing or previous
endocarditis
, and of these, nine had aortic annular destruction and cavity/pseudoaneurysm formation and five had prosthetic valve
endocarditis
. Three patients (8%) were operated because of mechanical valve dysfunction. One patient was treated for an ascending aortic aneurysm and aortic insufficiency. The remaining 25 patients were operated because of congenital or acquired aortic insufficiency, stenosis, or both. Ten patients (25%) underwent concomitant procedures. No mortality or serious complications occurred. Morbidity was limited to one case each of total atrioventricular (A-V) block, sternal pseudarthrosis, minor
stroke
, and deep vein thrombosis. Thirty-five patients had no or trivial, two patients mild, and three patients moderate autograft valve insufficiency during a median follow-up of 8 months (range 0-23 months). Two patients had pulmonary stenosis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:The Ross operation: results of early experience including treatment for endocarditis. 851 18
Between June 1990 and June 1993, 135 patients received a porcine stentless aortic valve (PSAV) at our institution. In this group, there were 33 patients in whom the stentless valve was used to replace a previously inserted malfunctioning aortic valve prosthesis (n = 19) or to treat acute aortic valve
endocarditis
(n = 14, five native, nine prosthetic
endocarditis
). There was one hospital death caused by multiple organ failure in a patient with
endocarditis
and preoperative cerebral
stroke
. Two patients died after hospital discharge; one suffered sudden death following a pacemaker failure four month after surgery and the other died due to Candida albicans sepsis after a prolonged antibiotic treatment. There were two reoperations; one to correct a dehiscence of the proximal suture line and the other to replace a degenerated valve 3.5 years after implantation in a 14 year old boy. All operative survivors were followed clinically with serial color Doppler echocardiography. No recurrence of
endocarditis
was detected. Aortic root reconstruction was achieved even in the presence of multiple abscesses. All but one patients showed a normally functioning valve with none or minimal aortic insufficiency. In our opinion the PSAV is an excellent aortic valve substitute for patients with damaged aortic annulus, because it promotes aortic root remodeling, decreases the incidence of postoperative paravalvular leaks and helps to prevent
endocarditis
recurrence.
...
PMID:Porcine stentless aortic valve in re-replacements and acute aortic valve endocarditis. 855 78
Statistically identified information on the relationships between the sites of lesions in intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH), risk factors such as a smoking or drinking habit, anamnesis, and biochemical data through blood tests will extend assistance to neuromedical clinicians on their daily clinical duties. It will provide them with a useful guide to determine the method of treatment. Also, it will be a basic research material for their clinical studies on diagnosis, progress, or prognosis in ICH. In order to obtain such statistics with the help of the computer, we need to have a computationally effective image database system. As is generally known, medical image data especially requires a great amount of storage; high-speed processing techniques are therefore also needed to deal with such data effectively. In addition, it is desired that we have outputs from the analysis edited with well-visualized effect, using 3D computer graphics, etc. These are why most existing image processing systems have been designed to work on comparatively large-scale computers. So far as we know, it is hard to find a practical and inexpensive personal computer-based application system for visualized statistical analysis of lesional images in ICH. We have developed a desk top computer-based program for statistical analysis of lesional image data of ICH. With this system, we can organize a medical image database that consists of the personal data of patients with ICH (sex, age, occupation, diagnosis, symptoms, part of physical disorder, etc.), risk factors, anamnesis (cerebral
apoplexy
, hypertension, hypotension, corpulence, diabetes, hyperlipidemia, atrial fibrillation, valvular
endocarditis
, etc.), biochemical data of blood, and lesional image data from CT or MRI. This system consists of the following components: 1) database management, 2) information retrieval (IR), 3) lesional image processing, 4) statistical analysis, and 5) prognostic prediction. The images are drawn manually on prescribed data sheets by tracing CT or MRI films and are read through the image scanner; then the compressed data of the digitized images is recorded in the database. Each recorded image data consists of the following two components: the frame image that corresponds to the contour of tissues of interest on the corresponding sliced section, and the actual image that corresponds to the lesion itself. In our system, these two images are separately stored and managed so that we can effectively perform subsequent image analysis. Other variables in the database (risk factors, anamnesis, etc.) are mainly used as search keys for making the aggregate of image data by the IR subsystem. In any aggregate, its elements, namely image data, have common medical background descriptions with the search keys. These aggregates can be used as input for the lesional image processing subsystem. With this subsystem, we can obtain the accumulated distribution of frequencies within a specified range of any sliced section, display planar color maps and profiles associated with the distribution, reconstruct it in 3D form, perform transformations of 3D images (zooming, enhancement, rotation, etc.), and test the significant difference of frequencies between any two different sites. We have been making practical use of this system to find the neurological relationship between the symptom (dysarthria, and paralysis of upper/lower limbs) and the site of lesion with cerebral infarction in pons. This study is quite important since the distributions of pyramidal tract related to the above symptom in pons are not well-known compared to those in cerebral cortex, internal capsule, or cerebral peduncle. With our system, we have obtained several findings expected to be helpful for this study. However, since this study is still in the initial phases, we will only present the outcome as a working example of our system. Our system was originally developed for analyzing lesional images with ICH. However, it could
...
PMID:A desk top computer program for visualized statistical analysis of lesional images in intracerebral hemorrhage. 859 83
Ten patients with neurological complications (NC) among a retrospective series of 53 consecutive cases of infective
endocarditis
were studied: 6 males and 4 females, mean age 60 years. NC were present at admission in 6 cases: 2 generalized seizures, 4 strokes, associated with 2 meningeal syndromes. Four cases of NC occurred during hospitalization: 1
stroke
with come, 1 transient ischaemic attack, 2 generalized seizures. Blood cultures were positive in 7 cases: 6 group D Streptococci, 1 Gram negative bacillus. Five digestive portal of entry were identified. Cerebrospinal fluid was purulent in 1 patient, aseptic in 1, haemorragic in 2, and normal in 1. Cranial computed tomography revealed: infarct in 4 cases, brain abscess in 1 case, absence of abnormality in 1 case. There was no angiographic documentation. Antimicrobial therapy was maintained 5 to 6 weeks. Two patients underwent cardiac surgery. Two patients died of subarachnoid haemorrage. Comparison of patients with NC, and the 43 without NC, revealed two different point: vegetations were more frequent in the NC (8 cases out of 10) than without NC (19 cases out of 43) (p = 0.04). Streptoccus was often more found in NC (6 cases out of 6) than without NC (6 cases out of 24) (p < 0.01). Compared with the previously reported studies, where Staphylococcus was usually described, our results showed a higher frequency of Streptococcus D bovis, an older age, a higher frequency of
stroke
and digestive portal of entry. Vegetations were more frequent with NC than without.
...
PMID:[Neurologic complications of infectious endocarditis]. 859 40
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>