Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0014118 (endocarditis)
15,629 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 10-year analysis of 113 cases of staphylococcal endocarditis seen in two Washington, D.C., hospitals is presented. 96% of the cases occurred in parenteral drug addicts, but 4% complicated septicemia from known foci of infection. Coagulase positive staphylococcus was responsible for 97% of the infection, and the rest were caused by coagulase negative staphyloccus. Except in four patients with previously known cardiac murmurs, infection occurred on normal valves in these patients. Infection was isolated to the tricuspid valve in 71%, to the mitral valve in 6% and to the aortic valve in 3.5% of our cases; and more than one cardiac valve was affected in the remaining patients. All patients were treated with antibiotics based on bacterial sensitivity testing. The mortality from isolated tricuspid endocarditis was 5%, from isolated mitral endocarditis 33%, and from isolated aortic valve endocarditis 100%. The overall mortality was 18%. The better prognosis documented for acute tricuspid endocarditis is related to the much less severe haemodynamic consequences of acute tricuspid regurgitation, and the probably milder consequences of septic pulmonary embolism compared with coronary or cerebral embolism.
...
PMID:Staphylococcal endocarditis: clinical observations on 113 patients. 9 45

Echocardiographic observations are described in 10 patients with right-sided bacterial endocarditis. Six of the nine patients with tricuspid regurgitation had shaggy echoes on the tricuspid valve, which were confirmed to be vegetations on autopsy in two patients. In six patients, right ventricular dilatation was present, and paradoxic septal motion was seen in four. In one of the patients with pulmonic valve endocarditis, the pulmonic valve and right ventricular outflow tract revealed the shaggy echoes in diastole, along with systolic fluttering of the pulmonic valve, right ventricular dilatation and paradoxic septal motion. When the findings are supplemented to the clinical picture, echocardiography is found to be a useful noninvasive adjunct in the diagnosis of acute vegetative bacterial endocarditis involving the right side of the heart, especially if other clinical features, e.g., fever, leukocytosis and positive blood cultures are absent.
...
PMID:Right-sided infective endocarditis: an echocardiographic study. 42 69

An 18-year old white youth presented with severe right heart failure and was found to have an obliterated and funnel-shaped right ventricle, massive tricuspid regurgitation, and mitral regurgitation. The haemodynamic findings were those of cardiomyopathy with obliteration on the right side. He underwent surgery consisting of decortication and peeling off of a thickened right ventricular endocardium, tricuspid valve replacement, and mitral valve repair. After surgery there was pronounced haemodynamic as well as clinical improvement. The pathological picture was that of constrictive endocarditis. We recommend this method of treatment for patients with obliterate cardiomyopathy on either side of the heart.
...
PMID:Constrictive endocarditis. Report of a case with successful surgery. 48 85

In a 54-month retrospective review, we compared the clinical features of 26 narcotic addicts with staphylococcal endocarditis (group 1) and ten other addicts with nonstaphylococcal endocarditis (group 2). The admission temperature and the respiratory rate of patients in group 1 were significantly higher (P less thn .05 and less than .02 respectively) than those of patients in group 2. Group 1 also differed from group 2 in the following variables: (1) bilateral multiple pulmonary infiltrates in 46% vs none in group 2; (2) greater incidence of symptoms referable to the central nervous system (50% vs none in group 2); and (3) gastrointestinal symptoms of vomiting, diarrhea, or constipation in 62% vs 10% in group 2. Serious cardiovascular, renal, and other complications were more frequent in staphylococcal endocarditis. Tricuspid regurgitation occurred with equal frequency in both groups and was of no value in differentiating staphylococcal from nonstaphylococcal endocarditis.
...
PMID:Comparison of staphylococcal and nonstaphylococcal endocarditis in narcotic addicts. 51 66

This report describes a spectrum of M-mode and cross-sectional echocardiographic abnormalities in eight patients with infective endocarditis of the tricuspid valve. The M-mode echocardiogram of the tricuspid valve was abnormal in all but one patient in whom abnormal echoes were seen anterior to the tricuspid valve, in the right ventricular cavity and right ventricular outflow tract. Six patients had shaggy echoes on the tricuspid valve; and one patient showed multilayered echoes on the tricuspid valve which resembled a right atrial myxoma. Irregular diastolic fluttering of the tricuspid valve, indicative of ruptured chordae tendineae, was noted in three patients. The cross-sectional echocardiogram showed abnormal thick shaggy echoes on the tricuspid valve in all five patients on whom the procedure was performed. Contrast echocardiography confirmed the presence of tricuspid regurgitation in four patients. We conclude that echocardiography is useful in the diagnosis of tricuspid valve vegetations, and in detecting complications such as ruptured chordae tendineae and tricuspid regurgitation.
...
PMID:Spectrum of echocardiographic findings in tricuspid valve endocarditis. 51 77

Neonatal nonbacterial thrombotic endocarditis (NBTE), a rare disorder yet to be diagnosed antemortem, is described in two infants. The first infant was postmature and suffered from polycythemia and meconium aspiration. The meconium-stained placenta manifested evidence of ischemia and disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC). The second patient was delivered near term by cesarean section, and hyaline membrane disease developed. The pathogenesis of NBTE may relate to perinatal hypoxia with transient tricuspid insufficiency, polycythemia, and DIC.
...
PMID:Neonatal nonbacterial thrombotic endocarditis. 58 32

We retrospectively reviewed 55 episodes that fulfilled criteria for Staphylococcus aureus endocarditis in 50 drug addicts. The most common presenting symptoms were fever(90%), chest pain(58%), and cough(43%). All patients had evidence of right-sided heart involvement, and a murmur of tricuspid insufficiency was noted in 42%. Evidence of left-sided heart involvement was present in only 5%. The most helpful laboratory aid in facilitating an early clinical diagnosis of endocarditis was the chest x-ray film. Roentgenographic evidence of septic pulmonary emboli was present in 67% of initial chest films and eventually in 87% of all cases. All but five patients completed at least four weeks of intravenous antibiotic therapy. No patients required cardiac surgery and there were no deaths. The apparent predilection of S aureus for the right side of the heart and infrequent left-sided involvement may explain why addicts with endocarditis have a favorable response to antibiotic therapy.
...
PMID:Staphylococcal endocarditis in addicts. 66 92

In two patients who had been heroin users, loud midsystolic clicks developed during infective endocarditis involving the tricuspid valve. The sounds were loudest along the left sternal border, exhibited an increase in intensity during inspiration and were associated with right atrial gallop sounds and with murmurs of tricuspid regurgitation. This constellation of clinical events suggests that the midstystolic clicks emanated from tricuspid valve structures as a result of disordered function of the chordae tendineae. Prolapse of the tricuspid valve has recently been demonstrated angiographically to accompany similar abnormalities of mitral valve motion in certain patients with the click-murmur syndrome. The participation of the tricuspid valve in the generation of the auscultatory finding is unclear, but the cases herein reported suggest that the tricuspid valve is capable of producing these findings.
...
PMID:Midsystolic clicks originiating from tricuspid valve structures: a sequela of heroin-induced endocarditis. 112 8

Tricuspid regurgitation developed in two patients after inferior wall myocardial infarction. Neither patient had preexisting valvular heart disease or evidence of endocarditis, and neither had suffered chest trauma. Because abnormalities in right ventricular function may occur after inferior infarction, and because other known causes of tricuspid incompetence were not present, we postulate that these patients developed valvular regurgitation from dysfunction of the papillary muscle complex controlling tricuspid valve function, a mechanism similar to that proposed to explain mitral regurgitation seen with inferior wall ischemia.
...
PMID:Tricuspid regurgitation following inferior myocardial infarction. 124 43

A 59-year-old chronic alcoholic male, with no cardiac past history, was hospitalised with septicemia 5 months after the endoscopic removal of 2 benign intestinal polyps. The diagnosis of tricuspid endocarditis was possible only 2 months later on the basis of echocardiography requested because of the onset of a tricuspid systolic murmur. Blood cultures revealed the presence in succession of streptococcus D fecalis then bovis. Antibiotics, changed several times because of the onset of complications (allergy, agranulocytosis), failed to deal with the problem of infection as shown by the development of several septic pulmonary emboli which finally resulted in total tricuspidectomy with neither immediate nor secondary valve replacement. The authors use this clinical case to review the characteristics of tricuspid endocarditis, the incidence of which is on the increase in certain etiological contexts (staphylococcal endocarditis in drug addicts or secondary to central vascular lines). They stress that the clinical picture is often confusing since the murmur of tricuspid incompetence is absent in 2/3 of cases. Echocardiography must therefore be requested routinely in all septicemias, thus enabling earlier diagnosis and assessment of the risk of pulmonary embolism (risk if vegetation greater than 10 mm). The nature of the organism responsible may be suggestive of certain etiologies. Thus malignant disease of the colon should be sought if the bacterium is a streptococcus D bovis. Apart from antibiotics, treatment must include effective anticoagulation to decrease the risk of embolic recurrence.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Isolated tricuspid endocarditis. Apropos of a case caused by Streptococcus D bovis and faecalis occurring after coloscopy]. 190 45


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>