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Query: UMLS:C0014118 (
endocarditis
)
15,629
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A study of nonbacterial thrombotic
endocarditis
has been carried out in a series of 3,404 autopsies performed upon atomic bomb survivors in Hiroshima in the period 1953-1970. The prevalence of the lesion was 2.4 per cent, with a greater frequency among the elderly and among females, and with a significant relationship to malignant neoplasms. In contrast to other reported series, there was a greater prevalence among cancers of the colon, rectum, and female genitourinary tract. No relationship was noted between the presence of NBTE and exposure to ionizing radiation. Histologic findings in the heart-valve leaflets in close proximity to the verrucae, like experimental studies reported by others, suggest that in association with severe
systemic disease
there appears a process consisting of degenerative changes in valve collagen and ground substance, with subsequent denudation of endothelium, localized almost entirely to the apposing leaflet surfaces of the left-heart valves. The verrucae of nonbacterial thrombotic
endocarditis
are then formed upon this abnormal leaflet surface. While the relationship between
systemic disease
and the pathologic changes observed in cardiac valve tissue is unclear, and although it is not known whether a "hypercoagulable state" may accentuate the tendency for thrombi to form upon these abnormal valves, there is no doubt that this lesion represents a clinically important complication of severe
systemic disease
. It also seems likely that in some cases NBTE may complicate an illness which may otherwise be curable. Increasing awareness of this pathologic entity among clinicians, coupled with appropriate laboratory techniques, most likely echocardiography, will permit more frequent diagnosis in living patients.
...
PMID:Nonbacterial thrombotic endocarditis in a Japanese autopsy sample. A review of eighty cases. 16 60
The presence of
systemic disease
may further increase the risk of bacterial endocarditis in the patient on chronic hemodialysis. Three patients are described; one with primary amyloidosis, a second with insulin dependent diabetes mellitus, and a third with heroin nephropathy who developed S.B.E. While the presence of the uremic state may hinder the recognition of
endocarditis
, the development of transient neurologic deficits, recent access infections and recurrent bacteremic episodes should be looked for as early clues to the diagnosis in this patient population.
...
PMID:Endocarditis in hemodialysis patients with systemic disease. 64 Dec 46
The endocardial fibroelastosis (EFE) is the most frequent cardiomyopathy. This disease is characterised by endocardial hyperplasia due to proliferation of elastic and collagenous fibres. There are primary and secondary forms. Within the primary form, the infantile form is the most frequent and of greatest importance to the pediatrician. This form is more a syndrom than a distinct disease. It is a reaction of the endocard due to several noxes. Lately a possible viral etiology is being discussed e.g. Parotitis, Coxsackie or other viruses. Clinical criteria for diagnosis are: cardiomegaly, left ventricular hypertrophy seen in 97% in the ECG, the absence of a murmur (or a soft apical mumur) absence of cyanosis and absence of
systemic disease
. Differential diagnosis is mainly between fibroplastic parietal
endocarditis
(FPE), cardiovascular collagenosis (CC) and endomyocard fibrosis (EMF). In FPE thrombosis is frequent and typically there is eosinophilia. CC is found in South Africa and is characterised by edema and fibrinoid necrosis. MEF is present mainly in Uganda, Nigeria and South India, characterised by endocardial fibrosis, valve involvement and eosinophilia. The obstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is characterised by a pronounced cardiomegaly, insufficient weight gain as well as dyspnea and cyanosis. Catheterization shows a gradient across one or both of the outflow tracts due to hypertrophic subaortic or subpulmonic stenosis. Therapy of EFE consists in treating the cardiac decompensation and according to the severity of the disease, in steroids.
...
PMID:[Endocardial fibroelastosis (E.F.) and its differential diagnosis]. 94 82
Thirty-three cases of infective
endocarditis
presenting during a 6.5 year period to a district general hospital were analysed retrospectively. The annual incidence was 22 cases per million population. Twenty-two cases had pre-existing cardiac disease, mainly valvular disease-usually rheumatic (nine cases) and prosthetic valves (10 cases). Recognizable precipitants such as recent surgery were uncommon. Two cases presented after deliberate drug overdose possibly due to depression exacerbated by
systemic disease
. Symptoms were usually non-specific. All but two cases had murmurs and most were pyrexial. Splinter haemorrhages and clubbing were seen in about 20% of cases. Viridans-type streptococci were the commonest infecting organisms (14 cases). Staphylococcal infection (six cases) was confined to intravenous drug abusers and patients with prosthetic valves. Five cases were culture negative. Cardiac failure was present in 13 cases at presentation and developed in seven others during treatment. Acute valve replacement was necessary in eight cases, and late replacement in three. Renal impairment (plasma urea > 8 mmol/l and/or plasma creatinine > 120 mumol/l) occurred in 19 cases during the course of their illness. Embolic phenomena occurred in 12 patients and mostly involved the central nervous system. In the 8 fatal cases, the cause of death was cardiac failure in six, cerebrovascular accident in one, and myocardial infarction in one. Four of the six patients who subsequently died of cardiac failure had been referred for surgery. Both those who were not referred had coexisting medical problems. Factors associated with increased mortality were age, male sex, cardiac failure (P < 0.01), renal impairment (P < 0.05), and embolic phenomena (P < 0.01).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Infective endocarditis in a district general hospital. 143 86
Propionibacterium acnes rarely causes
systemic disease
. Few cases of P. acnes
endocarditis
have been reported. This report describes a 63-year-old man who presented with severe congestive heart failure. He had prosthetic valve
endocarditis
which resulted in severe acute aortic insufficiency. During surgery he was found to have complete disruption of the aorta and left ventricle with a false aneurysm encompassing the circumference of the aortic annulus. Cultures of the valve grew P. acnes. Thus, although P. acnes is a rare cause of
endocarditis
, it may pursue a very aggressive course, especially in the setting of a prosthetic valve.
...
PMID:Propionibacterium acnes prosthetic valve endocarditis: a case of severe aortic insufficiency. 156 34
There have been only a few investigations that have considered renal disease or any disturbance of renal function in the calculation of risk in cardiac surgery. Risks of cardiac surgery have to be considered for renal disease without direct connection to heart disease (e.g., infections of the kidney and of the urinary tract, primary and secondary glomerulonephritis, parenchymal renal disease, and impaired renal function of unknown origin), as well as in renal disease with concomitant influence on heart and kidney (e.g., infective
endocarditis
, arterial hypertension,
systemic disease
of heart and kidney such as with diabetes mellitus, disturbance of kidney function or electrolyte balance due to heart failure). In most cases, the problem is solved by therapeutic intervention and postponement of cardiac surgery. A limited or negative operative indication is found with untreatable infection of the kidney or urinary tract, with untreatable nephrotic syndrome, in advanced renal disease with heart transplantation, as well as in case of severe arterial hypertension with possible organ complications, and in advanced diabetes mellitus with ESRD and multiorgan involvement. After cardiac surgery, acute renal failure represents a critically important complication. Primary therapeutic procedures must include prophylaxis of hemodynamic unstable situations, as well as prophylaxis of infectious complications. Cardiac surgery in dialysis patients and post-transplant patients is basically possible and only has a slightly increased risk compared to patients with normal renal function. Seventy-seven dialysis patients were operated (49 aorto-coronary bypass operations, 19 single-valve and multiple-valve replacements, five patients with valve replacement and aorto-coronary bypass, and four other cardiac surgical operations). Only in valve replacement, was mortality significantly higher than in renal healthy persons, the main causes of death being cerebrovascular complications and septicemia.
...
PMID:[Extracardiac risk factors in heart surgery--the kidney]. 208 10
The review presented here covers metastatic local and
systemic disease
secondary to the accumulation of plaque or the formation of other pathogenic microbial depots in the mouth. At least 3 pathways may link oral infection to secondary disease, to wit metastatic infection due to transient bacteremia, metastatic immunological injury, and metastatic toxic injury. The available evidence is presented and examples are provided. They concern among others such divergent diseases as acute bacterial myocarditis, infective
endocarditis
, brain abscess, uveitis and iridocyclitis, trigeminal and atypical facial neuralgia, unilateral facial paralysis, fever of "unknown' origin, and neutrophil dysfunction.
...
PMID:Plaque and systemic disease: a reappraisal of the focal infection concept. 636 12
Unusual manifestations of meningococcal infection as pneumonia, pericarditis,
endocarditis
, arthritis, urogenital infections and acute abdominal disease are seen combined with meningitis or septicemia, but can also appear alone without
systemic disease
. Incidence, diagnosis, clinical symptoms and therapy are briefly discussed with documentation from literature.
...
PMID:Unusual manifestations of meningococcal infection. A review. 641 5
The first case of gonococcal
endocarditis
on a prolapsing mitral valve is reported. The organism was found to be highly sensitive to penicillin G, Arg- Hyp- Ura-, and sensitive to the bactericidal action of normal serum. This combination of characteristics in a strain of Neisseria gonorrheae causing
systemic disease
is distinctly unusual. With high dose penicillin therapy the immunologic parameters returned to normal and the patient made an uneventful recovery. High levels of circulating immune complexes were detected in the patient's serum.
...
PMID:Gonococcal endocarditis in a patient with mitral valve prolapse: study of host immunology and organism characteristics. 708 Dec 90
Locoregional expression of cat scratch disease is well known, but despite advances in microbiology over the last 10 years leading to the description of two new bacteria (Afipia felis, Bartonella henselae) the infective agent responsible for cat scratch syndrome remains unknown. Until the 80s, only one
systemic disease
was attributed to infection with a germ in the Bartonella genus: trench fever. With the onset of the AIDS epidemic, new clinical syndromes caused by Bartonella bacteria have been described: bacillary angiomatosis, hepatic peliosis, cases of recurrent septicemia, cases of
endocarditis
, etc. More recently, atypical forms of cat scratch disease including systemic diseases have been reported in immunocompetent subjects. Although quite rare (1% of the cases), such types of expression can raise questions as to diagnosis both in terms of clinical signs and in terms of bacteriological findings. Clinical and experimental data do not provide a clear direction for treatment but would suggest that prolonged use of aminoglycosides is useful.
...
PMID:[Visceral localizations of cat-scratch disease in an immunocompetent patient]. 872 80
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