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Query: UMLS:C0014118 (
endocarditis
)
15,629
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The antiphospholipid syndrome has been associated with multiple cardiac abnormalities. The earliest reports were of valvular disease, including verrucous
endocarditis
, as well as valvular thickening and insufficiency. Subsequently, antiphospholipid antibodies were implicated in coronary artery disease manifested by premature myocardial infarction and coronary artery bypass graft occlusion. In addition, there have been rare reports of intracardiac thrombi and diffuse
cardiomyopathy
in association with antiphospholipid antibodies. In this review, we discuss the nature and prevalence of the cardiac manifestations of the antiphospholipid antibody syndrome as well as some of the proposed pathophysiologic mechanisms. We also provide examples from our own experience. The expanding spectrum of cardiac disease associated with antiphospholipid antibodies suggests an important role for these antibodies in certain types of cardiac pathology.
...
PMID:Cardiac manifestations of the antiphospholipid syndrome. 144 4
Few disorders ever provoked more interest and controversy than mitral valve prolapse (MVP). Past echocardiographic over-diagnosis led to it becoming a whipping boy for otherwise unexplained chest pain, palpitation, arrhythmias and emboli. Surgical centres reported a high incidence of
endocarditis
and severe regurgitation. Most investigators who have studied the prevalence of arrhythmias in MVP have concluded that they are more common in this syndrome than in the general population and that there is a causal rather than a fortuitous relationship. However, the prevalence of arrhythmias in reported studies is probably higher than in unselected MVP patients. Multiple ventricular premature beats, ventricular tachycardia and sudden death have been reported. Suggested mechanisms have included a focal
cardiomyopathy
with incoordinate contraction and relaxation, QRS dispersion, a long QT, traction on papillary muscles by prolapsed leaflets, interference with the blood supply of the papillary muscles, stimulation of the endocardium by the chordae and diastolic depolarisation of muscle fibres in redundant leaflets with triggered repetitive automaticity. MVP has been associated with pre-excitation giving rise to atrioventricular re-entry tachycardia. Autonomic dysfunction and a hyperadrenergic state has been claimed and this may also be responsible for supraventricular arrhythmias including atrioventricular nodal re-entry tachycardia, flutter and fibrillation. Electrophysiological studies have yielded contradictory results which may be due to the heterogeneity of the patients studied and variability of the mechanisms. Whatever the true prevalence, arrhythmias in MVP are usually benign. Syncope and sudden death are rare. Anti-arrhythmic therapy is only warranted in patients with frequent and distressing symptoms shown to be due to the arrhythmias or when arrhythmias are judged potentially life threatening.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Mitral valve palpitations. 144 39
A patient with hypertrophic obstructive
cardiomyopathy
(HOCM) and Staphylococcus aureus mitral valve
endocarditis
is reported. Bacterial endocarditis occurs with increased frequency and the prognosis is worse in these patients. All patients with HOCM should therefore be given antibiotic treatment every time they undergo invasive procedures to prevent potentially fatal bacteraemia.
...
PMID:[Hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy complicated with bacterial endocarditis]. 150 61
It is well known that radiation therapy to the anterior mediastinum may induce lesions of all cardiac structures. The pericardium is most frequently involved, but atrioventricular conduction disorders,
cardiomyopathy
, coronary stenosis may also be produced. Aortic, mitral and tricuspid lesions have been described. However, clinical evidence of pulmonic valve involvement has not been reported. Only at necropsy has fibrotic thickening of the pulmonic cusps occasionally been found. We report a case of infective
endocarditis
of the pulmonic valve in a 53-year-old patient who had undergone thoracic radiation therapy for Hodgkin's disease 31 years previously. Four years prior to the
endocarditis
he had also been submitted to myocardial revascularisation for critical lesions of the left main and right coronary ostia, and to aortic valve replacement because of stenosis and insufficiency. At that time, the pulmonic valve was fibrotic on echo examination. It is noteworthy that, of all the cardiac valves, the infective process involved only the pulmonic one, which is seldom the target of an infection. To our knowledge this is the first case of bacterial endocarditis of a heart valve that had been previously damaged by radiation therapy.
...
PMID:[ Bacterial endocarditis of the pulmonary valve damaged by thoracic radiotherapy (in Hodgkin's disease)]. 179 Aug 26
Infective endocarditis is a serious disease and should be, if possible, prevented. Two risk groups are classified in relation to the patient's underlying cardiac lesions. At high risk are patients with prosthetic valves or with a previous infective
endocarditis
. Patients with congenital and acquired heart disease, mitral valve prolapse with regurgitation and hypertrophic obstructive
cardiomyopathy
are at moderate risk. Patients of these two groups should receive antibiotic prophylaxis before dental or surgical procedures that cause bacteremia. For patients at moderate risk a single dose of an orally administered antibiotic should be given one hour before the procedure (e.g. amoxicillin 3 g for procedures of the oropharyngeal, gastrointestinal or genitourinary tract, where the causitive agents of
endocarditis
are Viridans streptococci or enterococci). Multiple doses are recommended for patients at high risk. The combination of amoxicillin and gentamicin (vancomycin and gentamicin in penicillin-allergic patients) offers the widest margin of safety in high-risk patients.
...
PMID:[Antibiotic prevention of bacterial endocarditis]. 185 64
Recent advances in Doppler echocardiographic techniques, especially using transesophageal approach, enable us to observe coronary arteries and their blood flow. However, the advantages of transesophageal approach in the evaluation of coronary artery are indistinct. The aim of this study was to examine the ability of transesophageal Doppler echocardiography (TED) and transthoracic Doppler echocardiography (TTD) to visualize coronary artery and measure its flow. The study population consisted of 17 healthy subjects and 41 patients with heart diseases (arrhythmia in 2, valvular disease in 10, ischemic heart disease without complete or subtotal obstruction of coronary artery in 22, congenital heart disease in two,
cardiomyopathy
in four, and infective
endocarditis
in one). Thirty subjects were examined by TED, and 44 subjects were examined by TTD. Two patients with complete obstruction of the proximal right coronary artery (RCA), who were not included in the above-mentioned subjects, were examined by TED. The results were as follows: 1) The detection rate of coronary arteries by TED and TTD were: left main trunk (LMT); 96.7/86.4%, left anterior descending artery (LAD) and left circumflex artery (LCx); 83.3/56.8%, and RCA; 63.3/38.6%, respectively. 2) Visible length from the orifice: LMT to LAD; 22.2/30.8 mm, RCA; 20.4/22.3 mm. 3) The detection rate of coronary flow by pulsed Doppler of the two methods: LMT; 66.8/0%, LAD; 70.0/31.8%, LCx; 6.6/0%. RCA; 26.7/0%. 4) Coronary flow was detected by transesophageal two-dimensional Doppler in 73.3% of LMT, 76.6% of LAD, 6.6% LCx and 43.3% of RCA. 5) RCA flow was not detected by transesophageal two-dimensional Doppler in two patients who had complete obstruction of the proximal RCA although RCA near the orifice was obviously imaged by two-dimensional echocardiography. In conclusion, TED had an advantage over TTD in detecting coronary arteries and their blood flow, but TTD had an advantage over TED as to the visible length of coronary artery. When RCA near the orifice was clearly visualized, the absence of RCA flow by TED implied complete obstruction of the proximal RCA.
...
PMID:[Imaging of coronary arteries and measurement of coronary flow using transesophageal Doppler echocardiography: a comparison with transthoracic Doppler echocardiography]. 193 Aug 87
Acute non-ischaemic mitral regurgitation (MR) has recently generated considerable interest because of its causal relationship to ruptured chordae tendineae and infective
endocarditis
, advances in its diagnosis by echo Doppler studies, and its management by afterload reduction and reconstructive surgery. It is fundamentally different from chronic MR because the previously normal, unprepared left ventricle (LV) and left atrium (LA) confront a sudden dramatic increase in volume. As the normal-sized left atrium suddenly receives a marked regurgitant flow, its pressure rises and is transmitted into the pulmonary capillaries causing pulmonary congestion and oedema. At onset, the LV function is usually well preserved and the pulmonary oedema does not reflect LV failure. In acute MR, the LV empties into the left atrium, thus reducing its radius and its systolic pressure, resulting in a decline in wall tension according to Laplace's law. With a reduction in LV wall tension, there is a marked increase in contractile shortening with marked increase in total LV output. The left ventricle may fail early in acute severe MR because it is forced to dilate rapidly before hypertrophy can occur, whereas in chronic MR both the LV diastolic volume and mass increase proportionately. With chronic persistence of MR, LV dysfunction and failure occur as a manifestation of the '
cardiomyopathy
of overload'. Fortunately because of the low energy cost per unit of work in shortening, as opposed to that used for tension development, there is only a slight increase in myocardial oxygen consumption in acute MR. In patients with LV failure secondary to acute MR, the ejection fraction may be only slightly decreased.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Left ventricular function in acute non-ischaemic mitral regurgitation. 193 16
The classification of
myocardial disease
proposed by the WHO/ISFC task force in 1980 distinguishes specific heart muscle diseases from myocardial diseases of unknown origin, termed cardiomyopathies, and differentiated into the dilated, hypertrophic and restrictive forms. This last group includes endomyocardiofibrosis and fibroblastic parietal
endocarditis
. In more recent years, two new forms of heart muscle disease have been recognized: so-called "primary" restrictive cardiomyopathy and arrhythmogenic right ventricular
cardiomyopathy
. Primary restrictive cardiomyopathy is characterized anatomically by normally sized, non-hypertrophic ventricles with dilated atria, and functionally by impaired diastolic compliance due to myocardial stiffness. The clinical picture is that of chronic congestive heart failure; histology shows interstitial fibrosis and myocardial disarray, but not hypereosinophilia. In arrhythmogenic right ventricular
cardiomyopathy
, the myocardium of the right ventricular free wall is substituted by fibrous and/or adipose tissue, which results in regional dynamic alterations and ominous ventricular arrhythmias. The left ventricle is usually spared. Both forms should be classified as heart muscle diseases of unknown origin, and kept clearly distinct from the other cardiomyopathies listed in the WHO classification.
...
PMID:Cardiomyopathy: a necessary revision of the WHO classification. 199 58
The authors report a case of mitral
endocarditis
diagnosed by cardiac echo-Doppler and complicating an obstructive
cardiomyopathy
(OCM) in a 37-year-old woman. Despite the high degree of sub-aortic obstruction and the existence of an apparently severe mitral leak by Doppler analysis, the patient remained totally asymptomatic and the outcome was favourable with appropriate antibiotics. A review of the literature revealed 11 cases of
endocarditis
in a context of OCM, documented by echocardiography. Echo-Doppler enables precise evaluation of this grave and often poorly tolerated complication of OCM.
...
PMID:[Diagnosis and evaluation of mitral endocarditis complicating obstructive cardiomyopathy using cardiac echo-Doppler]. 202 8
Heart disease is the most important nonobstetric cause of maternal death; however, most young women with heart disease do well during pregnancy. If the physician is uncertain of the effects of pregnancy on a particular heart condition, needless restrictions may be imposed. The main hazards are: pulmonary edema when it occurs suddenly in mitral stenosis; pulmonary hypertension (because pulmonary vascular disease tends to be exacerbated by pregnancy); infective
endocarditis
(this is rare); and fulminating peripartum
cardiomyopathy
. The practical management of the pregnant patient with various concomitant heart conditions (congenital heart disease, pulmonary hypertension, rheumatic heart disease, anticoagulants and artificial valves, constrictive pericarditis, kyphoscoliosis, Marfan's syndrome, mitral prolapse, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, dilated cardiomyopathy, infective
endocarditis
, and arrhythmias) is discussed. An absolute indication for therapeutic abortion is severe pulmonary vascular disease; discretionary indications include 'chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension,' cardiomyopathies (depending on the hemodynamic disturbance), and Marfan's syndrome.
...
PMID:Cardiovascular disease in pregnancy. 218 16
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