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Query: UMLS:C0014118 (
endocarditis
)
15,629
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Intravascular device-related infections (IVDRIs) are among the most common nosocomial infections in critically ill patients. Quantitative or semi-quantitative microbiology diagnosis is necessary for their management. Most causative organisms arise from the skin; staphylococci are responsible for two-thirds of the IVDRIs, with Staphylococcus aureus responsible for 5% to 15%. Complications may include septic shock, suppurative
thrombophlebitis
, and
endocarditis
. In critically ill patients, intravenous lines are responsible for at least 23% of nosocomial bloodstream infection, which has a mortality of 25% and is associated with a longer stay in intensive care and costs $28,960 per survivor. IVDRIs can be treated with intravenous antibiotics without removing the device, but removal of the catheter is recommended. Prevention is based on careful insertion practice and optimal catheter care. Systemic replacement of the intravenous lines every three to five days is common practice in the USA but not elsewhere in Europe. This issue should be studied, particularly in critically ill patients.
...
PMID:Intravascular device-related infections in critically ill patients. 860 39
Intravenous catheter sepsis is an important challenge for physicians because it is associated with a high incidence of complications, and treatment can be very costly. Significant complications occur in about 25% of cases and include septic shock, suppurative
thrombophlebitis
, metastatic infection, and
endocarditis
. The risk of such complications is increased when catheter removal or appropriate antibiotic therapy is delayed, when Staphylococcus aureus is the pathogen, and probably when a prosthetic heart valve or pulmonary artery catheter is present. The optimum duration of antibiotic therapy for intravenous catheter sepsis has not been established and depends on the pathogen and on the presence of other risk factors for complications. A treatment duration of 1 week may be adequate for pathogens, such as coagulase-negative staphylococci or Candida, that are unlikely to cause complications, while > or = 2 weeks of antibiotic therapy is warranted for S aureus. Recent approaches that may help to reduce costs include shortening the duration of parenteral antibiotic treatment either by giving oral agents for part of the treatment period or by using a synergistic combination of antibiotics. Also, for infections in subcutaneously tunneled catheters, intraluminal administration of small volumes of highly concentrated antibiotics often is an effective alternative to prolonged systemic antibiotic therapy.
...
PMID:Cost control of therapy for i.v. catheter infections. 1012 34
We present a 45-year-old patient on chronic hemodialysis who suffered aortic
endocarditis
by Staphylococcus haemolyticus after bacteremia associated with a venous catheter, which was used temporarily during the maturing phase of a Cimino-Brescia arteriovenous fistula in the left forearm. Three weeks after starting antibiotic therapy, the patient suffered a septic pulmonary embolism. The catheter had been removed 4 weeks before the embolism.
Thrombophlebitis
of lower limbs, infection or thrombosis of the vascular access, and the involvement of right-sided cardiac structures were all discarded. We assumed that the pulmonary episode was probably a consequence of the paradoxical passage of embolic material, detached from the aortic valve, from arterial to venous circulation through the arteriovenous fistula.
...
PMID:Inverse paradoxical embolism in a patient on chronic hemodialysis with aortic bacterial endocarditis. 1043 Sep 89
We describe 3 patients who developed infectious aneurysms of the cavernous carotid artery. The aneurysms were due to sphenoidal sinusitis in two patients and due to
endocarditis
in one. The acute and septic onset of the cavernous sinus syndrome, suggested
thrombophlebitis
of the cavernous sinus in all 3 patients. The diagnosis was established by magnetic resonance imaging and magnetic resonance angiography. Therapeutic internal carotid artery occlusion was indicated for a fissuration of their aneurysm manifested (n=3) by an episode of epistaxis (n=2) and blood in sphenoid sinus (depicted by MRI) in one case. We discuss the pathophysiology and management of bacterial aneurysms of the cavernous carotid artery. Close clinical and imaging follow-up should be performed for patients under antibiotherapy. Selective angiography with therapeutic occlusion of the carotid artery is discussed in patients with persistence of symptoms or if clinical findings are suggestive of fissuration or if aneurysmal sac diameter increases on follow-up imaging studies.
...
PMID:[Infectious aneurysms of the cavernous carotid artery]. 1091 9
Therapeutic failure is a situation to be feared in severe infections due to staphylococci. In this article, we consider the difficulties faced is achieving a positive diagnosis in the context of such failures, and an approach to analysing their causes. The possible reasons for therapeutic failure must be considered systematically. The two principle causes are unquestionably the persistence in the patient of an infected, foreign body (intravenous catheter or prosthesis) and endovascular infections (
thrombophlebitis
or
endocarditis
). The rules for the prescription of antibiotics are followed, target concentrations are achieved and drug failures are a rarity today. This observation may be called into question by the emergence of strains with diminished sensitivity to glycopeptides. These therapeutic failures remain exceptional cases today.
...
PMID:[The management of treatment failures for staphylococcal infections]. 1207 37
Catheter-related infections (CRI) are a leading cause of morbidity and sometimes a cause of death in cancer patients. For preventive strategies, intra- and extra-luminal colonization pathways should be taken into account. A definite diagnosis of CRI requires usually the removal of the catheter for culture of the catheter-tip. However, only about 20% of the catheters removed for suspicion of CRI actually prove infected. The diagnosis of CRI is likely when a bloodstream infection due to coagulase negative staphylococcus, S. aureus or Candida spp occurs, without other infectious focus. Among the catheter-tip culture techniques, quantitative methods offer the better sensitivity-specificity/complexity-cost compromise, and should be preferred to semi-quantitative ones. When a venous access port is removed because of suspected CRI, the catheter tip and the port itself should be both cultured. Immediate removal of the catheter and urgent antibiotic treatment are mandatory when severe local infection (such as tunnelitis or cellulitis) or severe sepsis occurs. Usually, a CRI due to S. aureus, Pseudomonas spp or Candida spp requires also the removal of the catheter. Diagnostic techniques without catheter removal may be only proposed when local or systemic severity signs are lacking. Recently, the measurement of the differential time to positivity between paired blood cultures drawn simultaneously on the catheter and on a peripheral vein has been proposed. Finally, the direct examination of blood drawn from the catheter using acridine-orange leucocyte cytospin test seems to be a promising and rapid method for the diagnosis of CRI. When a CRI is diagnosed, a treatment without catheter removal may be proposed when local or systemic severity signs are lacking mainly if coagulase negative staphylococci are involved; in such case, both systemic antibiotic therapy and lock-therapy should be associated. In case of clinical failure of this strategy after 48-72 hours, the catheter should be removed. If the sepsis persist, a residual infectious focus (
thrombophlebitis
,
endocarditis
, secondary localisation) should be investigated.
...
PMID:[Infections of intravascular perfusion sets]. 1500 68
Malignancy-related thromboembolism, so-called Trousseau's syndrome, can present as acute cerebral infarction, non-bacterial thrombotic
endocarditis
(NBTE) and migratory
thrombophlebitis
. It is usually attributed to a cancer-related hypercoagulable state, chronic disseminated intravascular coagulopathy (DIC), or tumour embolism. We report on two patients with adenocarcinoma of the colon and cholangiocarcinoma who developed widespread thromboembolism during disease progression. Both did poorly despite aggressive institution of anticoagulation therapy. These cases emphasize that cerebral infarction or refractory thromboembolism in cancer-treated patients should prompt investigation for recurrent or metastatic disease or progression of the underlying malignancy. Optimal treatment remains to be established.
...
PMID:Trousseau's syndrome related to adenocarcinoma of the colon and cholangiocarcinoma. 1525 90
Infectious complications are one of the most important causes of morbi-mortality in oncology patients. Neutropenia is the most important risk factor for developing infection in the oncology patient. Although the highest mortalities continue to be associated with infections due to enterobacterias and Pseudomonas aeruginosa, the frequency of infections due to gram-positives is higher. Deep fungic infections, like those produced by resistant or infrequent bacteria usually occur in late periods of protracted neutropenias. In recent years different studies have shown the efficiency of antibiotic patterns in monotherapy in the treatment of the neutropenic patient with fever. Cellular immunosuppression is not usually as relevant as neutropenia in oncology patients without complications. However, the use of high doses of steroids in some patients and above all the use of purine analogues and monoclonal antibodies has changed this situation in recent years. With these patients it is recommendable to use prophylactic measures directed against Cytomegalovirus, Varicela-zoster virus, P.carinii (or jirovecii) and fungic infections. Bacteraemia associated with endovascular catheterisation is the principal cause of bacteraemia in these patients, above all due to gram-positive micro-organisms. In case of infection, it is always advisable to remove the catheter. However, under certain circumstances, where the placing of a new catheter might be risky given the patient's characteristics and where there are agents of low virulence (e.g. coagulase-negative staphylococcus), a conservative treatment can be tried. A persistence of fever or bacteraemia following removal of the catheter should lead to suspicion of the presence of a deep infection, fundamentally suppurated
thrombophlebitis
or
endocarditis
. An adequate understanding of the infectious complications in these patients and their correct treatment and prevention are decisive in reducing the high mortality associated with these clinical manifestations.
...
PMID:[Principal infections in the oncology patient: practical treatment]. 1572 2
A 34-year-old Japanese woman developed subcutaneous induration in the left thigh, then showed extreme eosinophilia, and died of hemorrhagic infarction of the brain. Autopsy revealed
endocarditis
with eosinophil infiltration and systemic
thrombophlebitis
, including pulmonary veins and intrahepatic branches of the portal vein. Arterial structure was relatively preserved. She had no clinical history of asthma and had anti-ascarid IgE antibody at postmortem serological examination; thus, her disease does not fulfill the diagnostic criteria of Churg-Strauss syndrome and idiopathic hypereosinophilic syndrome (HES). Her organ involvement is, however, consistent with that of HES; thus, her pathophysiological conditions would resemble those of HES. Systemic
thrombophlebitis
without arterial lesion in patients with hypereosinophilia has never been reported, and this case would broaden the spectrum of vascular lesions in these patients.
...
PMID:Hypereosinophilia with systemic thrombophlebitis. 1594 28
Septic pulmonary embolization (SPE) is a rare but serious disorder. It is a well-recognized potential problem in the settings of tricuspid valve
endocarditis
, septic
thrombophlebitis
, infected central venous catheters, and postanginal septicemia. Less well documented is the occurrence of SPE in patients with periodontal disease without suppurative
thrombophlebitis
of the great vessels of the neck. We report a patient with SPE in whom periodontal disease was the only identifiable nidus of infection and review the literature regarding the four other patients reported to have suffered this complication.
...
PMID:Septic pulmonary emboli due to periodontal disease. 1637 34
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