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Query: UMLS:C0014118 (
endocarditis
)
15,629
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The decrease of rheumatic aortic regurgitation (AR) is observed due to the relative increase of non-rheumatic aortic valvular diseases since 1980. Among 240 patients who had undergone aortic valve replacement (AVR) including combined valvular diseases up to March 1989, the congenitally
bicuspid
aortic valve was responsible for AR and stenosis (AS) in 33 patients (13.8%) and were divided according to the presence of a raphe. In the raphe (+) group (n = 15), infective
endocarditis
(IE) (n = 5), prolapse of the aortic valve, mainly non-coronary cusp (n = 5), and thickening with contraction of cusp (n = 4) were the cause of AR. Calcification of the cusp was seen in 2 older (greater than 59 yrs) patients. In the raphe (-) group (n = 18), IE (n = 2), contraction of cusps (n = 2) in the relatively younger (less than 48 yrs) were the cause of AR. Rest of the patients exhibited severe AS due to the calcification of cusps except a case who showed IE with AR in the calcified cusp. Although not generally recognized, the
bicuspid
valve with a raphe, less tendency to deposit calcium, is an important cause of pure AR severe enough to warrant AVR. The
bicuspid
valve without raphe, as already recognized, prones to develop severe calcification and AS in later life.
...
PMID:[Significance of raphe in congenitally bicuspid aortic valve]. 235 88
From 1946 to March 1989, 92 patients (33 women and 59 men) were seen with ventricular septal defect (VSD) and audible aortic regurgitation (AR). The VSD was subcristal in 62 patients, subpulmonary in 21 and unknown in the remaining 9. The median age of onset of AR was 5.3 years. The risk of developing AR was 2.5 times greater in those with a subpulmonary VSD. The aortic valve was tricuspid in 90% and
bicuspid
in 10%. Prolapse was seen in 90% of those with subcristal VSD and in all with subpulmonary VSD. Pulmonary stenosis was seen in 46% of the patients with gradients ranging from 10 to 55 mm Hg. The incidence of infective
endocarditis
was 15 episodes/1,000 patient years. Among 20 patients followed medically, for 297 patient years, 1 died (1959) and most have been stable, including 2 followed for greater than 30 years. In the 72 patients operated on, there were 15 perioperative and 5 late deaths. Operations consisted of VSD closure alone in 7, VSD closure and valvuloplasty in 50 and VSD closure and aortic valve replacement in the other 15. Valvuloplasty was more effective in those operated on under age 10 compared to those older than 15 years (46 vs 14%). The durability of the valvuloplasty was 76% at 12 years and 51% at 18 years.
...
PMID:Long follow-up (to 43 years) of ventricular septal defect with audible aortic regurgitation. 236 80
Thirteen cases of infective
endocarditis
(IE) diagnosed for the first time at autopsy or, in those patients with a previous diagnosis of IE, not thought to be active at the time of death, are presented. Of the six patients who died within 24 h of the onset of symptoms, two died of obstruction of a valve orifice, two died of sepsis, one died of sepsis and alcoholic cardiomyopathy, and one died of a coronary artery embolus. Of the five patients with symptoms lasting more than 24 h, three died of sepsis and congestive heart failure. One died from sepsis alone and one died from congestive heart failure (CHF). In two patients whose duration of symptoms is unknown, one died of sepsis and CHF, and in the other the mechanism of death is unknown. Predisposing factors present in 11 of 13 patients included alcoholism (three), intravenous (IV) drug abuse (three), prosthetic valves (three), aortic stenosis (two), past rheumatic fever (one), and nonstenotic congenitally
bicuspid
valves (two). The reasons for no antemortem diagnosis were a missed or incorrect clinical diagnosis in three patients seen by a physician shortly before death, no signs or symptoms or found dead (four), non-specific signs and symptoms (three), refusal of medical treatment (one), and a solitary lifestyle (one); there was insufficient information about one patient. Individuals with needle tracks, generalized petechiae. Osler's nodes, splinter hemorrhages, intravenous catheters, pacemaker wires, and infected aortic-valve (A-V) shunts are at risk of IE. Blood and the vegetations should be cultured. The attending physician should be notified of the diagnosis in such cases.
...
PMID:Unexpected death as a result of infective endocarditis. 258 45
Eighty opiate addicts were studied at necropsy. Fifty-nine patients had anatomic evidence of active infective
endocarditis
(IE); 11 had healed IE; and 10 had both. Of the 80 patients, the first episode of IE involved a single right-sided cardiac valve in 24 patients (30%); both a right- and a left-sided valve in 13 patients (16%); a single left-sided valve in 33 patients (41%); and both left-sided valves in 10 patients (13%). Of the 320 cardiac valves in the 80 patients, 103 were sites of vegetations, an average of 1.3 of the 4 valves. Of the 80 patients, the tricuspid valve was infected in 35 (44%), mitral in 34 (43%), aortic in 32 (40%) and pulmonic in 2 (3%). Of the 103 infected cardiac valves, the infection caused sufficient damage to cause dysfunction in 70 (68%): in 28 (88%) of 32 infected aortic valves; in 22 (63%) of 35 infected tricuspid valves; in 19 (56%) of the 34 infected mitral valves; and in 1 of the 2 infected pulmonic valves. Of the 80 patients, 57 (71%) had sufficient valvular damage to cause valvular dysfunction. Of the 80 patients, gross examination of the valves at necropsy indicated that the infected valve almost certainly had been anatomically normal in 65 patients (81%) and abnormal in 15 patients (19%) before the onset of IE. Of the 65 patients with previously anatomically normal valves, 86 (33%) of their 260 cardiac valves were sites of infection (average 1.3 valves/patient); of the 15 patients with infection superimposed on a previously abnormal valve, the infection in each involved previously abnormal valves (21 in the 15 patients) or 17 (28%) of their 60 cardiac valves were sites of infection (average 1.1 valve/patient). Of the 15 patients with abnormal cardiac valves before the infection, 7 had congenitally
bicuspid
aortic valves and 8 had diffuse fibrous thickening of the mitral valve typical of rheumatic heart disease with (6 patients) or without (2 patients) diffuse fibrous thickening of tricuspid aortic valves. Of the 80 patients, 42 (53%) died during their first episode of active IE, 17 (21%) underwent operative excision with or without valve replacement during the active IE, and in 21 patients (26%) the first episode of active IE healed. In 10 of the latter 21 patients, active IE recurred and was fatal. A total of 19 patients had cardiac valve excision with or without replacement, 17 during active IE and 2 after healing.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Infective endocarditis in opiate addicts: analysis of 80 cases studied at necropsy. 271 95
The authors report a case of probable Haemophilus influenzae
endocarditis
in a 7 month-old infant with a
bicuspid
aortic valve. Precocity of the occurrence of
endocarditis
in such asymptomatic cardiac abnormality, scarcity of the suspected germ, and the observed mode of evolution are underlined. This case raises the problem of an endocardial involvement in an infant properly treated by adapted intravenous antibiotherapy. It can be concluded that regular clinical and echocardiographic examination is necessary for every case of severe Haemophilus influenzae infection.
...
PMID:[Suspicion of Haemophilus influenzae endocarditis of the bicuspid aortic valve in a 7-month-old infant]. 278 13
Despite different aetiologies, acquired aortic stenosis is a self-maintaining, slowly progressive process with good long-term prognosis. In 142 patients with mild stenosis, there was clinical progression within 10 years of the initial diagnosis in only 12% of patients. Twenty-five years after the diagnosis had been established, the severity of aortic stenosis was clinically unchanged in 38%, while 25% of patients had moderate stenosis and 35% had undergone valve replacement. Progression of moderate aortic stenosis was more rapid: the average time interval between the manifestation of moderate aortic stenosis and surgery was 13.4 years. Age at the onset of initial symptoms was related to aetiology: 39 +/- 18 years with rheumatic aortic stenoses, 48 +/- 6 years in patients with
bicuspid
valves who had no history of rheumatic fever, infective
endocarditis
or myocarditis, and 66 +/- 12 years in degenerative, calcific stenoses of tricuspid aortic valves. Patients with haemodynamically severe stenosis who had refused the recommended operation (n = 55) had an overall poor prognosis: mean survival averaged 23 +/- 5 months and the five-year probability of survival was 18 +/- 7%. All these patients died within 12 years of observation. Mean survival after the occurrence of angina pectoris was 45 +/- 13 months, after syncope 27 +/- 15 months, and after first occurrence of left heart failure 11 +/- 10 months.
...
PMID:The natural history of aortic valve stenosis. 304 4
The truncal valves of 12 patients (eight females and four males) who had undergone valve replacement were studied. The patients ranged in age from 14 months to 21 years (mean, 10 years). All truncal valves were purely regurgitant: nine were severe, two were moderate, and one was mild. Eight of the valves were tricuspid, two were
bicuspid
, one was quadricuspid, and one was unicommissural. Each valve was thickened, but none was the site of
endocarditis
. The thickening tended to be greatest along the distal portion of each cusp and resulted primarily from expansion of the spongiosa and fibrosa layers. In seven of the 12 valves, the spongiosa disrupted the fibrosa. In 11 valves, fibrous pads were also observed along the cuspid surfaces. These histopathologic features are indistinguishable from those described for floppy mitral valves and support the concept that floppy valves may result from a congenital abnormality in valvular structure.
...
PMID:Surgical pathology of the truncal valve: a study of 12 cases. 320 87
Anatomically isolated aortic valve disease accounted for 1.1% of all and 5.2% of cardiac autopsies over a 20 year period. Among a total of 100 symptomatic cases, 52% had congenitally
bicuspid
, 43% had tricuspid and 5% had congenitally unicuspid valves. Nineteen percent had undergone fibrous sclerosis, including 1% unicuspid, 3% tricuspid and 15%
bicuspid
valves. Thirty nine percent had been affected by infective
endocarditis
, including 20
bicuspid
and 19 tricuspid valves. The remaining 42 showed fibrocalcification, including 4 unicuspid, 17
bicuspid
and 21 tricuspid valves. The nature of the valvular disease showed a correlation with the age of the patient. Infective endocarditis, fibrosis and calcific disease occurred in an ascending age pattern, at average ages of around 30 years, mid to late thirties and mid to late forties, respectively. The lesions occurred much earlier on the
bicuspid
than on the tricuspid valves, except for infective
endocarditis
. The
bicuspid
deformity was not found to make the aortic valve more prone to infection, nor did infection occur earlier on it than on the tricuspid valve. Four of the 100 cases, all tricuspid, were considered to be of rheumatic origin, the reasons for which are discussed. Certain well established associated cardiac lesions were identified.
...
PMID:Anatomically isolated aortic valve disease. Morphologic study of 100 cases at autopsy. 322 43
Seventy nine patients were operated for aortic regurgitation due to bacterial endocarditis confirmed anatomically at surgery between 1968 and 1984. They were classified into 3 groups according to the stage of
endocarditis
at the time of operation: progressive
endocarditis
(21 cases), recent
endocarditis
(39 cases) and late
endocarditis
(19 cases). The patients were adults (21 to 70 years) and predominantly male (82 p. 100). Previous valvular disease was found in 38 cases,
bicuspid
aortic valves were found in 21 cases. Most of the patients operated early (recent progressive
endocarditis
) had cardiac failure and the surgical indication was nearly always poor haemodynamic tolerance. In addition, this indication was also retained in late forms of the disease in patients usually panci-symptomatic in the presence of signs of increasing left ventricular dysfunction. The aortic lesion was the only pathology in 55 cases and was associated with periannular abscess in 8 cases, septal abscess in 5 cases including one with septal perforation, and mitral
endocarditis
in 12 cases. Seven patients died during surgery, in low output states in 6 cases (global mortality 8.9 p. 100). The 72 survivors were followed up for an average period of 5 years (4 to 168 months); three patients were lost to follow-up. The actuarial survival rate including the operative mortality was 77 p. 100 at 5 years and 64.6 p. 100 at 10 years. Valve dehiscence was common (52 p. 100); although the perivalvular leak was usually small, in 11 cases it was quite severe and 7 patients had to be reoperated. An excellent functional result was observed in 30 cases, especially in those patients operated early.
...
PMID:[Surgery of bacterial aortic insufficiency. Indications and results]. 345 Feb 8
A 42-year-old man was admitted with acute severe aortic regurgitation. There were no signs of a systemic infection. M-mode and two-dimensional echocardiography revealed
bicuspid
aortic valve and echocardiographic features consistent with aortic leaflet rupture. The diagnosis was confirmed at surgery. This report illustrates that spontaneous rupture of a
bicuspid
aortic valve should be considered in acute aortic regurgitation without infective
endocarditis
.
...
PMID:Acute aortic regurgitation due to spontaneous rupture of a bicuspid aortic valve: detection by echocardiography. 362 98
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