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Query: UMLS:C0014118 (
endocarditis
)
15,629
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
An extremely unusual case of myocardial infarction associated with infective
endocarditis
(IE) is described. A 38-year old male with a high fever was transferred to our hospital for further treatment of IE. Two-dimensional echocardiogram showed a large
mycotic aneurysm
of the sinus of Valsalva in contact with neighbouring structures. The patient had a rapid recovery within several days after administration of antibiotic agents. However, he then developed abrupt onset of severe precordial pain. From the echocardiogram images and biochemical evaluation he was diagnosed as having an acute subendocardial infarction. Serial echocardiograms revealed expansion of the aneurysm, extending from the myocardium of the anterolateral free wall to the lower margin of the proximal left coronary artery. The cause of acute myocardial infarction was thought to be incomplete occlusion of the coronary artery through compression by the enlarging
mycotic aneurysm
of the sinus of Valsalva. Urgent surgery confirmed compression of the left coronary artery by the large
mycotic aneurysm
as the cause of acute myocardial infarction.
...
PMID:Infective endocarditis causing acute myocardial infarction by compression of the proximal left coronary artery due to a mycotic aneurysm of the sinus of Valsalva. 176 85
A case of intracranial
mycotic aneurysm
due to culture-negative infective
endocarditis
involving a patient with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is reported. The patient, a 22-year-old woman with no history of known prior disease, had fever, headache and focal neurologic symptoms 3 days before admission. An echocardiogram performed after admission disclosed an obstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and a gross vegetation on septal leaflet of mitral valve. Cerebral angiography revealed a
mycotic aneurysm
involving a peripheral branch of the left middle cerebral artery. Causal agent was not identified, and empiric treatment with penicillin G and streptomycin achieved medical cure and disappearance of the aneurysm 2 weeks later. Four months after
endocarditis
had been cured, the patient was electively operated because of progression of mitral regurgitation. Six months later, she is asymptomatic.
...
PMID:[The management by medical treatment of an intracranial mycotic aneurysm in a patient with infectious endocarditis with negative blood cultures and hypertrophic myocardiopathy]. 176 11
Mycotic aneurysm
of the septal leaflet of the mitral valve is an infrequent complication associated with aortic infective
endocarditis
. The most probable mechanisms implicated on its formation are two: the lesion induced by regurgitant jet striking on septal mitral leaflet and the direct spreading of infection through the fibrosa inter-valvular. We describe the preoperative diagnosis of mycotic aneurysms of the septal mitral leaflet by two-dimensional echocardiography and color flow mapping in 2 patients. Surgical management will depend on the anatomic characteristics of the aneurysm and its hemodynamic repercussion. Careful echocardiographic search for mycotic mitral aneurysms should be performed in cases of aortic valve
endocarditis
, in view of its important prognostic implications.
...
PMID:[The importance of the echocardiographic diagnosis of a mycotic aneurysm of the mitral septal leaflet in infectious endocarditis of the aortic valve: the surgical implications]. 180 Oct 96
Patients with blood cultures positive for gram-positive cocci were enrolled in a prospective randomized double-blind comparative trial of vancomycin at 15 mg/kg every 12 h versus teicoplanin at 6 mg/kg every 12 h for three doses and then 6 mg/kg every 24 h. A total of 54 patients were randomized, and 40 were evaluable. Of the 40, 9 had infection of indwelling vascular catheters. Four infections were due to Staphylococcus aureus, and five were due to Staphylococcus epidermidis. In concert with catheter removal, all patients were treated successfully, regardless of which drug they were taking. Of 31 patients without an indwelling catheter, 19 were infected with S. aureus, and 12 of the 19 had either
endocarditis
or
mycotic aneurysm
. Six of eight patients given teicoplanin failed treatment, as opposed to one of four patients given vancomycin (P = 0.14). Of greater concern, four of four patients with left-sided
endocarditis
or
mycotic aneurysm
failed to recover when given teicoplanin, as opposed to one of three patients given vancomycin (P = 0.07). Although not quite statistically significant, the unexpectedly high number of treatment failures with teicoplanin resulted in a decision to discontinue patient enrollment. It is suggested that future trials explore the efficacy of larger doses of teicoplanin.
...
PMID:Failure of treatment with teicoplanin at 6 milligrams/kilogram/day in patients with Staphylococcus aureus intravascular infection. The Infectious Diseases Consortium of Oregon. 182 94
Coronary embolism is a known complication of bacterial endocarditis that sometimes causes acute myocardial infarction. The necessity for rapidly restoring coronary artery perfusion and the time constraints governing clinical decisions may prevent
endocarditis
from being diagnosed before pharmacologic or mechanical thrombolysis. This report describes the first documented cases of coronary angioplasty in two patients with acute myocardial infarction caused by bacterial endocarditis, and reviews the literature on coronary artery complications of bacterial endocarditis. The first patient developed a coronary artery
mycotic aneurysm
at the dilatation site; the second experienced a small intracerebral hemorrhage following reperfusion. It is, of course, unwise to generalize from two cases, but we believe that in patients who are most likely to have
endocarditis
as the cause of acute myocardial infarction, the impulse to follow conventional strategies for coronary reperfusion should be tempered by thoughts of possible consequences.
...
PMID:Bacterial endocarditis presenting as acute myocardial infarction: a cautionary note for the era of reperfusion. 200 22
Thirty out of 287 patients (10.4%) admitted to hospital for infective
endocarditis
between December 1970 and January 1990 had neurological complications. Twenty-three patients had native valve infectious endocarditis and 7 had prosthetic valve
endocarditis
. The clinical features were characterized by the frequency of aortic valve involvement (23 out of 30) and other complications, especially cardiac failure (16 cases) and peripheral vascular manifestations (7 cases). The commonest organism was the staphylococcus (53% of identified organisms) but the number of negative blood cultures was high (50% of cases). The neurological complication was often the presenting symptom of the
endocarditis
(19 cases) but it occurred after bacteriological cure in 4 cases. The complications observed were cerebral ischemia (16 cases), cerebral haemorrhage (11 cases), coma (2 cases), and one peripheral neuropathy causing a Claude Bernard Horner syndrome. These complications presented with hemiplegia in 17 cases, a meningeal syndrome in 8 cases, a convulsion in 1 case, a Von Wallenberg syndrome in 1 case, and a Claude Bernard Horner syndrome in 1 case. Twelve patients had a transient or permanent neurological coma. Cerebral CT scan showed ischemic lesions in 7 cases and haemorrhagic lesions in 10 cases. Carotid angiography demonstrated mycotic aneurysms in 6 patients. Twelve patients died: the cause of death was neurological coma (7 cases), low cardiac output (4 cases) and haemorrhagic shock (1 case). Four patients underwent neurosurgery: 3 for clipping a
mycotic aneurysm
and 1 for drainage of an intracerebral haematoma. Poor prognostic factors were: coma, cardiac failure, cardiac valve prosthesis and, above all, the extent and multiplicity of the neurological lesions. The authors propose the following measures to improve the prognosis: early surgery in cases of large and/or mobile vegetations especially when the infecting organism is a staphylococcus and when a systemic embolism has occurred; routine CT scanning and/or digitised cerebral angiography in all patients with infective
endocarditis
to detect surgically accessible mycotic aneurysms.
...
PMID:[Neurologic manifestations of infectious endocarditis]. 201 89
We reported a 29-year-old man with active
endocarditis
complicating aortic and mitral valve regurgitation. The echocardiogram showed a
mycotic aneurysm
at aortic valvular annulus and a aneurysm of mitral valve. Heart failure was progressive and caused anuria. Prior to emergent double valve replacement, 2,500 ml of water was removed. Then hemodynamics became stationary. Urination was good during and after operation. In this case, complicating acute renal failure, dehydration with extracorporeal ultrafiltration method was very effective for improvement of hemodynamics.
...
PMID:[An emergent aortic and mitral valve replacement for active infective endocarditis preoperatively using extracorporeal ultrafiltration method]. 202 Jan 51
Fifty cases of aortic valve
endocarditis
during a 6-year period between 1982 and 1988 were reviewed. Twenty-three (46%) had aortic root complications by way of aortic root abscess or
mycotic aneurysm
in the perivalvular area. Patients with root complications were grouped into the aortic root abscess (ARA) group and those without into a non root abscess (NARA) group. Prosthetic valve endocarditis dominated in the ARA group (12 and four cases of prosthetic valve infection in the ARA and NARA groups, respectively; P less than 0.01). Surgical mortality was significantly higher at 13.6% in the ARA group as opposed to 2.2% in the NARA group (P less than 0.05). Post-operative aortic regurgitation was present in 8 (57%) of 14 patients in the ARA group surviving surgery but in only two (8.7%) of 23 patients in the NARA group (P less than 0.03). We conclude that aortic root complications are a frequent occurrence in aortic valve
endocarditis
, lead to an increased operative mortality and is associated with a high incidence of post-operative aortic regurgitation.
...
PMID:Aortic root complications of infective endocarditis--influence on surgical outcome. 204 59
A 17-year-old man presented with acute febrile illness with jaundice, embolic skin lesion, heart murmur, renal insufficiency and abnormal CSF. Pasteurella multocida was isolated from blood cultures. In spite of adequate antibiotic treatment for
endocarditis
of the mitral valve, he developed a fatal ruptured cerebral
mycotic aneurysm
. Post mortem examination revealed an atrial septal defect, vegetation at the anterior mitral leaflet, intraventricular, subarachnoid and intracerebral hemorrhage.
...
PMID:Pasteurella multocida infective endocarditis: a case report. 208 20
A
mycotic aneurysm
of the common digital artery at its junction with the palmar arch, extending into the ulnar proper digital artery of the index finger, is reported in a patient with
endocarditis
. A review of the English-language literature revealed no case of
mycotic aneurysm
in a digital artery. Diagnosis of the aneurysm was established noninvasively by ultrasound. Because this patient lacked a radial proper digital artery to the finger, the aneurysm was managed by excision and revascularization with a bypass graft from the long finger. Postoperative circulatory monitoring was facilitated by a pulse oximeter.
...
PMID:Mycotic aneurysm in a digital artery: case report and literature review. 218 4
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