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

In a 54 year old woman affected by infective endocarditis, with bicuspid aortic valve and aneurysm of sinus of Valsalva protruding into the right atrium, two-dimensional echocardiography helped to identify altered myocardial echo patterns of the interventricular septum at basal level. Because of the proximity with valvular lesions due to endocarditis, we could interpret these appearances as produced by invasion of the infective process into the septum. The autopsy report of septum rupture in the same area further supports our interpretation of the echocardiographic finding.
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PMID:[Aneurysm of the sinus of Valsalva and late rupture of the interventricular septum due to infective endocarditis. Is the two-dimensional echocardiography of endocarditic extension into the interventricular septum possible?]. 372 29

Twenty specimens of heart with mycotic aneurysms at the aortic root were studied. In ten cases, mycotic aneurysm followed infection of the aortic valve. In one case, it developed following infection of an aortic jet lesion, and in nine patients, the aneurysm was at the seat of a prosthetic aortic valve. In seven of the 11 cases with a natural aortic valve, the valve was either unicuspid or bicuspid. A retrospective evaluation of the data on the clinical records of the 20 patients revealed that infective endocarditis or noncardiac postoperative sepsis was present in 11. The most frequently isolated microorganism was Staphylococcus aureus. Conduction disturbances were found in six patients, all of them with involvement of the atrioventricular node by the aneurysm. Perforation into intracardiac cavities was found in four, two into the right ventricular infundibulum and one each into each atrium. Pericardial tamponade was caused by bleeding from the aneurysm in two cases, and myocardial infarction was a probable consequence of coronary arterial compression by the aneurysm in two cases. Mycotic aneurysms of the aortic root, in spite of their being partially or completely healed of active infection, carry a high risk of the complications enumerated. Among the 20 cases, cultures were positive in 11 and negative in nine. Staphylococcus aureus was cultured from five of the cases.
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PMID:Mycotic aneurysms of the aortic root. A pathologic study of 20 cases. 375 65

In 388 patients with severe isolated aortic valve disease bicuspid aortic valves were found in 45% of patients with aortic stenosis and 24% of patients with aortic regurgitation. There was a history of rheumatic fever in 16% and of endocarditis in 7% of these patients. In a group of 110 patients with severe combined aortic and mitral valve disease, 50% had a history of rheumatic fever and bicuspid valves were found in only 12% of the cases. Severe aortic valve disease based on bicuspid valves was most frequently found in the age group 50-69 years. Bicuspid aortic valve is today the most frequent cause of isolated aortic valve disease; it is more common in aortic stenosis but also occurs in aortic regurgitation.
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PMID:[Significance of the bicuspid aortic valve in the incidence of aortic valve defects in adults]. 378 32

Prolapse of the aortic valve (PAV) was diagnosed in 20 patients using a method of two-dimensional echocardiography. PAV primary and secondary forms were distinguished. Congenital pathology of the other cardiac valves (prolapse of the atrioventricular valves and the bicuspid aortic valve) or the aorta was observed in primary PAV. Secondary PAV was observed as a concomitant pathology in dilatation of the aortic root resulting from atherosclerosis or in an infectious process on the aortic cusps in subacute septic endocarditis. Of non-invasive diagnostic methods the most effective one was two-dimensional echocardiography which could be regarded as a verifying method in PAV.
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PMID:[Prolapse of the aortic valve]. 382 76

The investigational Carpentier-Edwards supra-annular valve was implanted in 592 patients from November, 1981, to February, 1984 (aortic valve replacement in 286, mitral valve replacement in 259, and multiple valve replacement in 47, for a total of 638 prostheses). A previous cardiac operation had been performed in 77 patients (13%). Concomitant procedures were performed in 202 patients (34.1%), including coronary artery bypass in 163 patients. The patient evaluation was 98.6% complete. The early mortality was 7.4% (44 patients) and the late mortality was 6.2% per patient-year (41 patients). The valve-related causes of late mortality were thromboembolism (five), anticoagulant-related hemorrhage (one), and prosthetic valve endocarditis (one). The overall patient survival, including operative death, was 85% at 2 years. The linearized occurrence rate for valve-related complications was 5.6% per patient-year (37 events)--thromboembolism 2.7% per patient-year (18) anticoagulant-related hemorrhage 1.2% (eight), prosthetic valve endocarditis 0.8% (five), and periprosthetic leak 0.9% per patient-year (six). There were no cases of primary tissue failure or structural failure. At 2 years, the freedom from valve-related complications was 86.9%, from valve-related mortality, 98.7%, and from valve-related mortality and reoperation, 97.7%. This valve is fixed in glutaraldehyde at low pressure and is designed to improve durability. It has provided a low incidence of valve-related complications without structural failure. The structural design of the prosthesis does not always conform to the anatomy of bicuspid aortic valves.
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PMID:Carpentier-Edwards supra-annular porcine bioprosthesis. Clinical experience and implantation characteristics. 395 75

The gross surgical pathologic features of the aortic valve were reviewed in 213 patients who had had clinically combined aortic stenosis and insufficiency and aortic valve replacement at our institution during the years 1965, 1970, 1975, and 1980. The three most common causes were postinflammatory disease (69%) and calcification of congenitally bicuspid (19%) and unicommissural (6%) aortic valves. Other causes included infective endocarditis (2%) and congenitally quadricuspid or malformed tricuspid aortic valves (1% each); the cause was indeterminate in 1%. In the postinflammatory and bicuspid states, calcification tended to be more extensive in men than in women. The relative incidence of postinflammatory disease in our study did not change appreciably from 1965 to 1980, despite the steadily decreasing incidence of acute rheumatic fever reported in western countries.
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PMID:Surgical pathology of combined aortic stenosis and insufficiency: a study of 213 cases. 398 77

Fifty consecutive patients (36 male, 14 female, mean age 28 years) who had heart murmurs and clinical and radiographic evidence of straight upper dorsal spine (straight back syndrome, SBS) underwent detailed clinical, electrocardiographic, roentgenographic, and echocardiographic evaluation. Palpable systolic thrill noted in one (2%) and widened S2 with persistent splitting in 2 (4%) patients were uncommon. Murmurs were invariably systolic in nature. Those located at the base of the heart in 19 (38%) patients were ejection in type and best heard during expiration. Those located at the apex in 26 (52%) patients were either mid-, late-, or pansystolic, and often associated with midsystolic click. Five (10%) patients had both types of murmurs. Diastolic murmurs were not heard in any patient. EKGs were normal in the majority. Cardiomegaly (C:T greater than 55%) was present in only 5 (10%) and dilatation of the main pulmonary artery in 2 (4%) patients. Thus the incidence of pseudoheart disease (PsHD) was small (14%). Echocardiograms were normal in 18 (36%) and abnormal in 32 (64%) patients. There was evidence of mitral valve prolapse (MVP) in 29 (58%) patients and 3 (6%) had evidence of bicuspid aortic valve (BAV). In a control group of 40 age- and sex-matched patients (26 male, 14 female, mean age 29.5 years), who also had heart murmurs but lacked straight upper dorsal spine, only 7 (17.5%) had MVP and none had BAV. The difference is both clinically and statistically significant (p less than 0.001). It is concluded that SBS is more often associated with valvular heart disease (MVP and BAV) than PsHD. Therefore, the diagnosis of SBS should remain presumptive until echocardiography has been performed to exclude MVP and BAV. SBS patients who have valvular heart disease should receive infective endocarditis prophylaxis.
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PMID:The "straight back" syndrome: current perspective more often associated with valvular heart disease than pseudoheart disease: a prospective clinical, electrocardiographic, roentgenographic, and echocardiographic study of 50 patients. 399 3

The prevalence and clinical significance of aortic valve prolapse were determined prospectively in 2000 consecutive patients undergoing routine clinical cross sectional echocardiography. Two hundred and twelve patients were excluded because the aortic cusps were not adequately visualised. Aortic valve prolapse was defined as downward displacement of cuspal material below a line joining the points of attachment of the aortic valve leaflets. Twenty four cases of aortic valve prolapse (1.2%) were identified. The patients were aged 12-64 years and nine were women. All had underlying valvar heart disease and the commonest lesion (in 11 cases) was prolapse of the larger cusp in bicuspid valves. Aortic valve prolapse was seen in four patients with mitral valve prolapse (two with severe regurgitation), one of whom had marfanoid aortic root dilatation. The remaining examples of aortic prolapse were seen in patients with various disorders including one with pulmonary atresia, two with aortic root disease (one with dissection and one with idiopathic dilatation), and one case of severe mitral regurgitation. Valves destroyed by infective endocarditis were seen in two cases. Aortic valve prolapse may be detected in various cardiac disorders and does not imply the presence of aortic regurgitation, but when bicuspid aortic valves are present it may well be important in producing such regurgitation. Although aortic valve prolapse may be associated with severe forms of mitral valve prolapse, these patients rarely have aortic regurgitation.
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PMID:Prevalence and clinical significance of aortic valve prolapse. 401 27

We have described a patient with fatal Corynebacterium hemolyticum endocarditis on a native bicuspid aortic valve. This is the first report of endocarditis and the first fatal infection of any kind caused by Corynebacterium hemolyticum. This organism and other nondiphtheria corynebacteria must be considered as potentially serious pathogens in man.
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PMID:Corynebacterium hemolyticum endocarditis on a native valve. 404 50

Abscesses in the aortic root are a serious complication of infective endocarditis and require accurate diagnosis for antibiotic and surgical management. Nineteen cases of endocarditis of a native valve or prosthetic valve and adjacent abscess cavities were identified with angiography. Of 6 patients with endocarditis of a native valve, 5 had bicuspid aortic valves and all had severe aortic regurgitation. Of 13 patients with endocarditis of a prosthetic aortic valve, all had paravalvular regurgitation. Abscesses in the aortic root were saccular, ranged from 1 to 3 cm in diameter, and, depending on sinus of origin, extended beneath the main and right pulmonary arteries or into the interventricular septum or mitral anulus. Fistulas were detected into the mitral anulus in 8 patients, and into the right ventricle in 3 patients. No complications from the catheterization were recorded during the 48-hour follow-up.
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PMID:Aortic root abscess resulting from endocarditis: spectrum of angiographic findings. 648 67


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