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

The clinical profile of 28 consecutive patients admitted with infective endocarditis (IE) between 1987 and 1988 was studied. There were 21 males and seven females with a mean age of 24 +/- 11 years. Rheumatic heart disease (RHD) was the commonest underlying disease (68%) followed by congenital heart disease (CHD). Mitral regurgitation with aortic regurgitation were the commonest valvular lesions (47%) in those with RHD while ventricular septal defect was the commonest (43%) in those with CHD. A younger age of onset, complicated course and high mortality were seen in these six patients with acute IE. Persistently positive blood cultures during life or at autopsy were obtained in 21%. Strep viridans was the commonest isolate and was often resistant to streptomycin. 2D echocardicgram revealed vegetations in 96% of patients, the aortic valve (39%) being more commonly affected than the mitral valve (11%). ESR of more than 20 mm drop 1st hour (Wintrobe) was seen in 96%. Thrombophlebitis was a common complication of therapy and cloxacillin the commonest drug implicated. A mortality of 21% as a result of refractory congestive heart failure (CHF) (50%), uncontrolled sepsis (33%) and embolic events (17%) was seen. A rising incidence of culture negative IE, combined aortic and mitral valve disease and CHF is noted.
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PMID:Changing spectrum of clinical and laboratory profile of infective endocarditis. 130 28

Cardiac diseases of cattle may involve valvular structures, myocardium, pericardium, or blood vessels and are manifested by the clinical signs of cardiac dysrhythmias, cardiac murmurs, generalized edema, muffled heart sounds, jugular venous distention, jugular venous pulsations, pulmonary edema, pleural effusion, or ascites. Digoxin, quinidine, and furosemide can be used effectively to control signs of CHF and cardiac arrhythmias. Combination antimicrobial therapy can be successful for cows with infective endocarditis and thrombophlebitis. Pericardial fluid drainage may temporarily improve cattle with traumatic pericarditis or lymphosarcoma so that short-term goals may be reached.
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PMID:Treatment of cardiovascular disease in cattle. 176 Jul 59

A case of facial cellulitis complicated by regional thrombophlebitis and septicemia is reported in a 6 year-old girl. Streptococcus sanguis, a bacterial agent, unusually responsible for cellulitis, was isolated from 5 blood cultures. This child had no immunosuppression or endocarditis or dental infection. She had been previously given a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory agent, which was potentially responsible for the diffusion of infection.
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PMID:[Palpebral edema with fever and Streptococcus sanguis septicemia]. 192 50

The clinical features of 101 Melanesian patients with Staphylococcus aureus bacteraemia observed during two 2-year periods (1977-1979 and 1985-1987) in a university teaching hospital in Papua New Guinea are reviewed. The age of the patients ranged from 12 to 70 years. There were 69 males and 32 females. Diabetes mellitus, found in 15 patients, was the most common predisposing factor. Most of the patients (87%) had community-acquired infection. Soft-tissue infection, pneumonia, arthritis, osteomyelitis, intravenous-site thrombophlebitis, cerebral abscess, endocarditis and cavernous sinus thrombosis were among the clinical entities observed. Soft tissues and lungs were the most common sites of primary and secondary foci of infection, respectively. All but 1 of the 101 blood isolates were resistant to penicillin G and none was resistant to methicillin. The overall case fatality rate was 24%. These data demonstrate that staphylococcal bacteraemia in adult Papua New Guineans is mostly community acquired and has a high mortality. Skin and soft tissues are the major primary foci of infection leading to staphylococcal bacteraemia.
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PMID:The clinical spectrum of staphylococcal bacteraemia: a review of 101 Melanesian patients from Papua New Guinea. 208 Jun 75

A case of bacteremia due to Campylobacter fetus subspecies fetus with concomitant pleuropericarditis in a previously healthy patient is presented. The organism is ubiquitous, but most commonly causes infection in patients with chronic underlying illnesses. The pathogenesis of human infection has not been definitively elucidated. Bacteremia is the most common clinical manifestation of this infection, although cases of thrombophlebitis, mycotic aneurysm, endocarditis, and pericarditis have also been reported. The treatment of choice for most infections is gentamicin, with chloramphenicol recommended for infection involving the central nervous system. Tetracyclines and erythromycin are alternative agents. Prolonged therapy is essential to the prevention of relapse. A high index of suspicion is necessary for the recognition of this organism in the appropriate clinical settings.
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PMID:Cardiovascular and bacteremic manifestations of Campylobacter fetus infection: case report and review. 219 44

The enterococcus has been relegated to a position of unimportance in the pathogenesis of surgical infections. However the increasing prevalence and virulence of these bacteria prompt reconsideration of this view, particularly because the surgical patient has become increasingly vulnerable to infectious morbidity due to debility, immunosuppression, and therapy with increasingly potent antibiotics. The enterococcus is a versatile opportunistic nosocomial pathogen, causing such diverse infections as wound, intra-abdominal, and urinary tract infections; catheter-associated infection; suppurative thrombophlebitis; endocarditis; and pneumonia. Although surgical drainage remains the cornerstone of therapy for enterococcal infections involving a discrete focus, in the circumstances typified by the compromised surgical patient, specific antibacterial therapy directed against the enterococcus is warranted. Recent evidence indicates that parenteral antibiotic therapy for enterococcal bacteremia is mandatory and that appropriate therapy clearly reduces the number of deaths.
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PMID:Pathogenicity of the enterococcus in surgical infections. 219

Cardiovascular manifestations develop in the majority of SLE patients at some time during the course of their illness, the most common being acute fibrinous pericarditis and pericardial effusion. Echocardiography has demonstrated an increased incidence of pericardial effusion, even in those who have minimal symptoms. Chronic adhesive pericarditis, pericardial tamponade, and constrictive pericarditis occur rarely. While myocarditis is commonly noted at autopsy, it is often silent clinically. Diagnosis during life can be confirmed only by endomyocardial biopsy. Electrocardiographic changes are often nonspecific. Endocarditis with superimposed nonbacterial verrucous vegetations (Libman-Sacks) is noted in more than 40% of hearts at autopsy, but is rarely diagnosed during life. Valve dysfunctions, such as aortic stenosis, aortic insufficiency, mitral stenosis, and mitral insufficiency, occasionally manifest during life and rarely may necessitate surgery. Atrial and ventricular arrhythmias, first degree AV block, and acquired CHB occur in association with pericarditis, myocarditis, vasculitis, and myocardial fibrosis, respectively. CCHB developing in newborns of mothers with SLE, particularly those who have an antibody to soluble tissue ribonuclear protein RO(SS-A), is increasingly being appreciated by both pediatric cardiologists and rheumatologists. Recently, severe coronary atherosclerosis resulting in angina pectoris and/or myocardial infarction in young adults has been noted, particularly in those who had developed risk factors such as hypertension and hyperlipidemia while receiving prolonged corticosteroid therapy. Rarely, coronary arteritis may produce similar symptoms. Congestive heart failure of either single or multiple etiologies carries an ominous prognosis. It remains a cause of high morbidity and mortality unless recognized early and treated properly. Extracardiac vascular manifestations of SLE include telangiectasia, vasculitis, livedo reticularis, Raynaud's phenomena, and thrombophlebitis, all of which may occur either alone or in different combinations. Evidence is now slowly accumulating that substantiates that immune complex deposition, complement activation and subsequent inflammatory reaction is responsible for the majority of the cardiovascular manifestations of SLE, for example, pericarditis, myocarditis, endocarditis, coronary arteritis, coronary atherosclerosis, and systemic and pulmonary vasculitis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Cardiovascular manifestations of systemic lupus erythematosus: current perspective. 286 Jun 99

Teicoplanin was evaluated in 47 patients with severe infections, including 14 patients with bone infections, 11 patients with soft-tissue infections, 7 patients with endocarditis, 5 patients with pneumonia, 3 patients with septic thrombophlebitis, 3 patients with septicemia of unknown origin, and 4 patients with miscellaneous infections. Overall, bacteremia was documented in 24 patients. The pathogens isolated were 35 strains of Staphylococcus aureus (including 8 methicillin-resistant strains), 4 strains of Staphylococcus epidermidis, 4 strains of Streptococcus faecalis, 2 strains of Streptococcus pneumoniae, 5 strains of other streptococci, and 1 Micrococcus luteus strain. A total of 22 patients (46.8%) were clinically cured, 8 patients (17.0%) improved, 2 patients (4.3%) had relapses after initial improvement, and 15 patients (31.9%) failed to respond. The results were better in nonbacteremic patients (19 of 23 patients [82.6%] were cured or improved) than in patients with bacteremia (12 of 24 patients [50%] were cured or improved). Bacteriological cure occurred in 25 patients (53.2%), and superinfections were documented in 6 patients (12.8%). No major adverse effects were observed. We conclude that teicoplanin is a potentially effective and well-tolerated antimicrobial agent for therapy of nonbacteremic infections caused by gram-positive bacteria.
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PMID:Clinical evaluation of teicoplanin for therapy of severe infections caused by gram-positive bacteria. 294

Nineteen patients hospitalized for serious gram-positive infections were treated with teicoplanin, a new glycopeptide antibiotic. A variety of infections were treated, including endocarditis, septic thrombophlebitis, osteomyelitis, pyogenic arthritis, and soft tissue infection. Of 13 infections that could be evaluated in 12 patients, there were 8 clinical cures, 2 improvements, 1 recurrence, and 2 failures. Of the eight patients with Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia, seven were clinically cured or improved with teicoplanin therapy. Of the nine patients in whom the bacteriological response to treatment could be fully evaluated, six were cured; there was recurrence of infection in one, and treatment failed in two patients. In vitro testing showed the 13 bacterial isolates (9 S. aureus, 3 S. epidermidis, and 1 group B streptococcus) to be uniformly susceptible to teicoplanin, with MICs ranging from 0.12 to 0.5 microgram/ml. Every isolate was more susceptible in vitro to teicoplanin than to vancomycin. Three of the staphylococcal isolates were resistant to methicillin. Pharmacokinetic studies demonstrated that after an initial drug-accumulation period, a single daily dose adequately maintained the teicoplanin concentrations in serum within therapeutic ranges. Teicoplanin also penetrated well into synovial fluid. The drug was well tolerated by either intravenous or intramuscular administration. The most significant adverse reaction was an urticarial rash which required discontinuation of therapy in one patient; a second patient experienced a modest decrease in high-frequency auditory threshold. Asymptomatic eosinophilia and mild elevation of serum transaminases were noted as well. The results of this study suggest that teicoplanin is a safe and effective new agent for treatment of serious infections caused by gram-positive organisms.
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PMID:Clinical evaluation of efficacy, pharmacokinetics, and safety of teicoplanin for serious gram-positive infections. 295 62

We examined central nervous system (CNS) lesions in 456 patients with primary extracerebral malignant tumors. Inflammatory reactions caused by viral (progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML), herpes zoster varicella), fungal, or bacterial infections could be demonstrated in 20 patients. In a further 19 patients, the brain tissue showed lymphocyte infiltrates of unknown etiology and, in four of these, autopsy revealed probable paraneoplastic, non-bacterial, endocarditis as a possible explanation for the local inflammatory reaction. The frequency of thrombophlebitis, non-arteriosclerotic thrombosis and arteritis was significantly higher than in a control group of 2052 tumor-free patients. Focal spongiform-axonopathic lesions (24 cases) as well as diffuse leukoencephalopathy (11 cases) were interpreted as probably being at least in part paraneoplastic because the same alterations could also be observed in patients who had never undergone cytostatic or radiation therapy. The possible pathogenetic conditions are discussed and a classification of these tumor-accompanying, but not always tumor-dependent, lesions suggested.
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PMID:Encephalomyelitis and demyelinating diseases in patients with extracerebral malignant tumors. 319 51


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