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

The gross surgical pathologic features of the aortic valve were reviewed in 225 patients who had had clinically pure aortic insufficiency and aortic valve replacement at our institution during the years 1965, 1970, 1975, and 1980. The four most common causes of aortic regurgitation were postinflammatory disease (46%), aortic root dilatation (21%), incomplete closure of a congenitally bicuspid aortic valve (20%), and infective endocarditis (9%). Other causes of aortic incompetence in our study included ventricular septal defects (2%) and quadricuspid aortic valves (1%); the cause was indeterminate in 1%. The mean age of patients at valve replacement was approximately 50 years for all etiologic factors except a ventricular septal defect. All forms of aortic insufficiency were much more common in male than in female patients, except the postinflammatory and indeterminate types, which occurred approximately equally in both sexes. Moreover, the incidences of postinflammatory disease and aortic root dilatation changed appreciably with time. Before 1980, their incidences were 51% and 17%, respectively, but during 1980, they were 29% and 37%, respectively. Accordingly, aortic root dilatation is now the most common cause of pure aortic regurgitation in our surgical population. The decrease in the incidence of postinflammatory disease may be a result of the decreasing incidence of acute rheumatic fever reported in western countries.
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PMID:Surgical pathology of pure aortic insufficiency: a study of 225 cases. 650 64

Based on the findings of 50 patients with infective endocarditis, 37 affecting the aortic, six the mitral and seven both the aortic and mitral valves, in addition to analysis of predisposing factors, prominent signs and symptoms distinctive for the clinical entity were assessed (Tables 1 to 3). Preexistent conditions such as aortic valve lesions including bicuspid aortic valve as well as mitral valve lesions including mitral valve prolapse were proven in 66%. Factors which may have compromised host defense mechanisms such as cachexia and chronic alcohol or intravenous drug abuse were present in isolated cases. In 38% of the patients, a diagnostic or therapeutic manipulation, suspected to have given rise to the bacteremia, antedated the onset of endocarditis. Malaise, fatigue and chills were the most frequent symptoms (Table 4). Fever and cardiac murmurs were observed in all patients, anemia and bacteremia in 74% of the patients, respectively (Tables 4 to 6). In blood cultures, the most common microorganisms were found to be hemolytic and nonhemolytic streptococci accounting for 65% of positive findings, followed by enterococci and gram-negative bacteria each with 14% respectively (Table 6). Congestive heart failure predominated among cardiac complications with its occurrence in 84% of the patients. Valvular ring or myocardial abscess, aortic or sinus of Valsalva aneurysm, occasionally with perforation, were found in 24% of our patients. Coronary embolism was documented in 6%; infection-associated pericarditis was observed only rarely (Table 7). Extracardiac complications involved the skin, central nervous system, spleen and kidneys, respectively, in 20 to 30% of the patients. Complications afflicting the eyes, lungs, gastrointestinal tract and the musculo-skeletal system were seen with a lesser frequency of 0 to 12% (Table 8). The diagnosis of infective endocarditis, rendered highly-probable by the constellation of fever, cardiac murmur, bacteremia and anemia, necessitates, however, confirmation through cardiac examinations. In this respect, electrocardiographic and radiologic findings are of limited value, although they may be useful in the detection of cardiac complications. In 6% of the patients, positive criteria for myocardial infarction were indicative of coronary embolism and, i 30%, atrioventricular or fascicular block suggested the presence of abscess formation (Table 9). As radiologic evidence of heart failure, 74% of the patients were found to have pulmonary vascular congestion (Table 10).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:[Detection and evaluation of infectious endocarditis]. 664 98

To assess the accuracy of echocardiography in determining the cause of aortic regurgitation M mode and cross sectional echocardiography were compared with angiography in 43 patients with predominant aortic regurgitation. Each patient had all three investigations performed during the same admission to hospital. In each instance, the cause of aortic regurgitation was confirmed at surgery or necropsy. Seventeen patients had rheumatic aortic valve disease, 13 bacterial endocarditis with a perforated or partially destroyed cusp, five a bicuspid aortic valve (four with a history of endocarditis), and eight aortic regurgitation secondary to aortic root dilatation or aneurysm. Overall sensitivity of echocardiography and aortography was 84% in determining the cause of aortic regurgitation. Thus, rheumatic valve disease and endocarditis appear to be the most common causes of severe aortic regurgitation in this hospital based population. Furthermore, echocardiography is a sensitive non-invasive technique for determining the cause of aortic regurgitation and allows differentiation of valvular from root causes of aortic regurgitation.
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PMID:Comparison of echocardiography and angiography in determining the cause of severe aortic regurgitation. 668 19

Seven out of 348 cases of Fallot's tetralogy (2 %) referred over an eight year period were complicated by aortic incompetence (AI). The incidence of AI was much lower than in VSD (7.6 %), probably because of the prevailing haemodynamics: in high VSD, the left-to-right shunt may damage the aortic cusps whilst in Fallot's tetralogy the output of both ventricles is ejected directly into the aorta with no alteration of aortic valve function. In this series, infective endocarditis was the predominant cause of AI (3 cases); surgery had to be undertaken in the infectious phase in 2 cases. AI was coincidental in two other cases (rheumatic valvular disease and calcified bicuspid valve). In the remaining two cases, the role of increased aortic flow in late distension of the aortic valve ring is discussed. AI should be corrected in the same operative time as the Fallot's tetralogy. Late onset AI occurring after repair of Fallot's tetralogy should also be corrected; in this situation, it is often difficult to diagnose the origin of the diastolic murmur. Without surgery the prognosis is poor as the diastolic regurgitation occurs in a ventricle whose function is often already compromised.
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PMID:[Tetralogy of Fallot and aortic insufficiency]. 679 83

Cardiobacterium hominis is a rare cause of endocarditis, and infection caused by this organism has not been described outside the vascular system. A patient with a congenital bicuspid aortic valve was initially seen with C hominis bacterial meningitis. Septic emboli from an underlying endocarditis were probably the source of the infection.
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PMID:Cardiobacterium hominis endocarditis manifesting as bacterial meningitis. 687 Apr 22

Sixteen patients with serologically proven Q-fever infection are reviewed. Fifteen had significantly raised antibody titres to both phase I and phase II Coxiella burneti antigens, indicating persistent or chronic infection. One patient, a premature infant who died, had raised phase II titres only, but is included together with the mother who had chronic Q-fever and was the presumed source of infection. Chronic Q-fever infection has previously been regarded as virtually synonymous with Q-fever endocarditis, but only seven of the patients in this survey had evidence of valvular endocarditis. In those who did, the infection had arisen on prosthetic valves or those affected by rheumatic or syphilitic heart disease. One patient had inexorably progressive destruction of an infected congenitally bicuspid aortic valve. Eight patients had infections associated with extra-valvular sites and several of these associations have not been previously described. These include extreme prematurity with perinatal death, possibly following transplacental infection, the sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS), multiple lower limb emboli from endocarditis of an abdominal aortic dacron graft, and colonization of ventricular endocardium following left ventricular myotomy/sub-aortic diaphragm resection. The current concept that chronic Q-fever is invariably associated with endocarditis is therefore untenable and the indications for phase I antibody screening should be extended to include patients other than those under investigation for 'culture-negative' endocarditis, for example those with unusual osteomyelitis of vertebrae.
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PMID:Chronic or fatal Q-fever infection: a review of 16 patients seen in North-East Scotland (1967-80). 687 20

In a retrospective study of 50 patients with infective endocarditis (IE), we found an overall mortality of 44%: among the 26 patients with natural valves (NV) the mortality was 19%; among the 24 with prosthetic valves (PV) it was 71%. Congenital heart disease was recognized in 17 of our cases, with a significant clustering in the NV group (50% vs 17%, p = 0.029); the most frequently encountered malformation was the bicuspid aortic valve. The incidence of rheumatic heart disease was 46% in the NV group and 83% in the PV group (p = 0.015). Manifestations of IE were protean and multisystemic. We calculated an average of 4.6 symptoms and 4.7 signs for each patient. Although sepsis was abated with appropriate antibiotics, death often ensued from multiple complications: congestive heart failure, arrhythmia, stroke, embolic myocardial infarction, valvular destruction or dehiscence, coagulopathy. New features of natural valve infective endocarditis are a rising incidence in the elderly and a survival rate seemingly at its peak. Features of prosthetic valve infective endocarditis include overwhelmingly frequent embolization to the central nervous system (p = 0.004), spleen (p = 0.009) and kidney (p = 0.010). Advances in therapy for this disease may come from early surgery in late prosthetic valve endocarditis and from future prospective studies to define how the host response influences the outcome.
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PMID:Infective endocarditis update experience from a heart hospital. 697 38

A patient with a corrected coarctation of the aorta subsequently developed infective endocarditis on a congenital bicuspid aortic valve. Resolution of the radiographic bone changes of hypertrophic pulmonary osteoarthropathy was demonstrated following treatment of the infection.
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PMID:The resolution of hypertrophic pulmonary osteoarthropathy following treatment of subacute infective endocarditis. 744 9

Although stenosis and infective endocarditis are commonly appreciated complications of the congenitally bicuspid aortic valve, pure severe aortic regurgitation complicating this congenital malformation, unassociated with either stenosis or infection, is not well recognized. Among 189 patients who had aortic valve replacement at the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute because of isolated pure aortic regurgitation, the congenitally bicuspid aortic valve, never the site of infective endocarditis, was responsible for the aortic regurgitation in 13 (7 percent). This report describes certain clinical and morphologic findings in 13 men, aged 26 to 65 years (mean 43), who required aortic valve replacement because of severe aortic regurgitation secondary to a noninfected, nonstenotic congenitally bicuspid aortic valve. Although not generally recognized, the noninfected congenitally bicuspid aortic valve is an important cause of pure aortic regurgitation severe enough to warrant aortic valve replacement.
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PMID:Congenitally bicuspid aortic valve causing severe, pure aortic regurgitation without superimposed infective endocarditis. Analysis of 13 patients requiring aortic valve replacement. 746 67

Between July 1994 and March 1995, seven patients (six male) with a mean age of 27 years (range 18 to 34 years) were selected for aortic valve replacement with a pulmonary autograft (Ross operation). The aortic valve disease was isolated insufficiency in four cases, stenosis in one and mixed lesion in two. Three patients had a bicuspid aortic valve. Previous cardiac surgical procedures had been performed in two cases (coarctation repair and valvuloplasty in one; isolated aortic valvuloplasty in one). Two patients were in NYHA class II and five in class III. In two cases the autograft was inserted as a scalloped subcoronary implant. Four patients had total aortic root replacement with re-implantation of the coronary ostia. The RVOT was reconstructed with a cryopreserved homograft (five pulmonary two aortic). The aortic cross-clamp time was 150 +/- 10 minutes with a total bypass time of 212 +/- 14 minutes. There was neither operative nor late mortality. Postoperative echocardiography revealed trivial autograft insufficiency in one case with a mean transvalvular gradient of 15.8 mmHg. All patients improved symptomatically (100% in NYHA class I). Freedom from reoperation, valve related complications and endocarditis is 100% at a mean follow up of 5.6 months (range 1-9 months). This preliminary experience supports the concept of pulmonary autograft implantation in selected patients.
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PMID:Preliminary experience with pulmonary autografts. 758 49


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