Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0014118 (endocarditis)
15,629 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

This study follows the clinical course of 22 patients in the active phase of infective endocarditis who inderwent valve replacement at North Carolina Memorial Hospital between March, 1966, and March, 1976. At the time of operation, there was gross valve tissue destruction in 16 patients, verrucae in nine, ruptured chordae tendineae in five, and myocardial or annular abscess formation in five. Four patients survived less than 6 months after the initial operation. One survived almost 3 years before dying of recurrent carcinoma of the lung. The remaining 17 patients have been followed an average of 4.6 years. Major postoperative complications were as follows: paravalvular problem, five patients; congestive heart failure, seven patients; complete heart block, three patients; systemic arterial emboli, four patients. These complications often were associated with the preoperative presence of annular or myocardial abscess. Thus it appears that postoperative complications often result from annular structural deficiencies rather than being directly related to active infection.
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PMID:The long-term outlook for valve replacement in active endocarditis. 92 13

We report our retrospective experience in the treatment of infective tricuspid endocarditis with valve repair From January 1981 through January 1999, 238 cases of infective endocarditis were seen at our institution, with tricuspid involvement in 19 cases. Tricuspid valve repair was performed in 9 patients whose valves had infective lesions involving a single leaflet. One goal of the repair was to avoid implanting any prosthetic material. At surgery, the posterior leaflet was completely excised and annuloplasty was performed in 4 patients. Wide quadrangular resection of the anterior leaflet and De Vega annuloplasty were performed in the other 5 patients. All patients had a good postoperative recovery Postoperative echocardiography showed no tricuspid regurgitation in 4 patients, mild regurgitation in 3, and moderate in 2. Follow-up ranged from 21 to 155 months (mean, 4756 +/- 50 [SD] months). Two late deaths occurred: one, 2 months postoperatively (sudden death), and the other, 108 months postoperatively (lung carcinoma). Late postoperative echocardiography showed no tricuspid regurgitation in 4 patients, mild in 2, and moderate in 2. No recurrent infection was observed. Tricuspid valve repair rather than valvulectomy or replacement is indicated in cases of right-sided endocarditis with single-leaflet involvement. Tricuspid repair enables eradication of the infection without implantation of prosthetic material.
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PMID:Tricuspid repair for infective endocarditis: clinical and echocardiographic results. 1145 39

In immunocompromised patients, endovascular infection due to Candida albicans is associated with significant morbidity and mortality. Recommended management includes removal of any existing central venous catheter. Rarely, complications of endocarditis or infected mural thrombi may arise, with poorer clinical outcomes. For large endoluminal lesions, particularly of the great vessels or those that are intra-atrial, thrombolysis has been used in paediatric populations or before surgery for dissolution of infected thrombus. We describe the case of an adult patient with lung carcinoma who developed persisting candidaemia with a large endovascular fungal lesion adherent to the tip of a peripherally inserted central venous catheter. Local urokinase infusion enabled safe removal of the catheter without embolization. As an adjunct to antifungal therapy, local thrombolysis may play a contributory role in the management of central venous catheter-related candidal septic thrombosis.
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PMID:Thrombolytic therapy for management of complicated catheter-related Candida albicans thrombophlebitis. 1929 Sep 85