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

Intravenous administration of live microorganisms to rabitts with cardiac catheters produces an experimental model of infective endocarditis. Despite the development of infected valvular vegetations, positive blood cultures, splenomegaly, and focal embolic renallesions, glomerulonephritis has not been found in these animals. In the present study, acute diffuse proliferative glomerulonephritis, featuring endothelial and mesangial proliferation, capillary occlusion, and leukocytic infiltration was produced in rabbits immunized withthe infecting agent prior to the establishment of left sided alpha-streptococcal endocarditis. Controls receiving immunization alone, immunization and sterileendocarditis, or infective endocarditis alone did not develop diffuse glomerulonephritis. Electron microscopic findings of occasional subendothelial electron-dense deposits and immunofluorescence deposition of IgG and C3 in a peripheral granular capillary pattern were consistent with an immune complex type nephritis. Decreased serum complement levels were demonstrated in those animals developing diffuse glomerulonephritis, and some animals developed circulating rheumatoid factor. In view of the morphologic findings and the necessity of preimmunization for development of glomerular changes, it is concluded that immune mechanisms play a role in the diffuse glomerulonephritis associated with this model of infective endocarditis.
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PMID:Diffuse glomerulonephritis in rabbits with Streptococcus viridans endocarditis. 12 60

The records of 180 patients out of 247 with bacterial endocarditis were examined. 50 patients had rheumatic manifestations. In 10 there was arthritis of 2-12 weeks' duration before diagnosis; 19 had myalgia/arthralgia; 17 had back or neck pain; 14 had demonstrable arthritis; and 2 tenosynovitis of the foot. Of the 14 patients with arthritis, 8 had monarticular arthritis and 6 polyarticular. All but one patient had a raised erythrocyte sedimentation rate, and in one patient rheumatoid factor was positive. The rheumatic features responded when the endocarditis was treated. Some of the symptoms undoubtedly resulted from the infection and fever of the endocarditis, and emboli may have caused the transient aches but there was no evidence that they caused the synovitis in the patients with arthritis. The rheumatic manifestations of bacterial endocarditis can mimic other rheumatic diseases and disguise the underlying disease.
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PMID:Musculoskeletal manifestations of bacterial endocarditis. 14 31

To examine the role of circulating immune complexes (CIC) in infective endocarditis, we studied 64 patients with infective endocarditis for the presence of CIC by the polyethylene-glycol (PEG)-precipitation test and the Clq binding test. This study was repeated during the course of the disease in 23 patients. CIC were found in 84 per cent of patients (66 per cent with acute infective endocarditis, 89 per cent with subacute infective endocarditis) during the active phase of the disease. Higer PEG precipitates were associated with typical cutaneous signs, cryoglobulins and nonstreptococcic culture-positive infective endocarditis. Under appropriate antibiotic treatment, the PEG precipitate levels of 17 patients fell within 1 month to the normal range, with a concomitant drop in cryoglobulinemia and rheumatoid factor. Conversely, uncontrolled sepsis always (six of six) yielded a rising level of CIC. These findings support the hypothesis that CIC may be important in the pathogenesis of peripheral lesions in infective endocarditis.
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PMID:Fate of circulating immune complexes in infective endocarditis. 15 40

Sixteen cases of chronic Q fever are described. In eight there was a history of exposure to infection from farms or farm products. All had valvular heart disease, involving the mitral valve in nine and the aortic valve in seven. Infection occurred on a prosthetic valve in two patients. Arterial embolism was common. Venous thrombosis occured in three patients, and pulmonary embolism occurred in three other patients. Complement fixing antibodies to phase 1 antigen were found in a titre of 1:200 or greater in all except two patients. In one of these post-mortem examination revealed rickettsial bodies in mitral valve vegetations, and in the other Coxiella burneti was isolated from heart valve tissue. The majority presented with infective endocarditis but two presented primarily with liver disease. All patients had evidence of liver involvement and in one this led to death from cirrhosis. Abnormal tests of liver function, particularly hyperglobulinaemia, raised alkaline phsophatase and abnormal bromsulphthalein retention were found in all patients. Hepatic histology was abnormal in all eight patients in whom it was studied. The commonest features were mononuclear cell infiltration of the portal tracts and prominence of the sinusoidal Kupffer cells. Patchy focal necrosis of parenchymal cells, granulomata, fatty change, and eosinophilia of the sinusoidal walls were also noted in several patients and cirrhosis developed in one. Six patients had a purpuric rash, and in 12 there was thrombocytopenia. It is suggested that the presence of hepatomegaly and liver involvement and thrombocytopenia may help to differentiate Q fever endocarditis from bacterial endocarditis. Raised serum IgM and IgA levels occured frequently, but with only a moderate dominance of IgM. Sheep cell agglutination and latex fixation tests for rheumatoid factor were occasionally positive. Several features of the disease suggest the possibility that immune-complex mechanisms may play a role in chronic Q fever. Treatment was with prolonged courses of tetracycline usually combined with lincomycin. Seven patients underwent valve replacement surgery for haemodynamic reasons. Five patients died; two from heart failure, one from cirrhosis, one seven days after valve replacement and one from intraperitoneal haemorrhage following percutaneous liver biopsy. Three patients have survived for more than five years, and another six for more than three and a half years after diagnosis. Of these nine patients, three received medical therapy alone and six required valve replacement as well. Antibiotics have been discontinued in four patients who have had valve surgery and three others. Six patients had received antibiotics for continuous periods varying from 29-62 months. In the period after stopping therapy varying from 15-21 months, no relapse has occured. A seventh patient, who had received antibiotics for four months prior to valve replacement, has survived 43 months after the withdrawal of antibiotics...
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PMID:Chronic Q fever. 94 Sep 18

Sera from 55 parenteral drug abusers with endocarditis due to Staphylococcus aureus were assayed for the presence and titer of rheumatoid factor. Thirteen (24%) of the 55 patients with endocarditis had sera positive for rheumatoid factor at one point or another in their courses; only 2 (7%) of 30 noninfected drug users were found to be positive. It appeared that more severe cases, as evidenced by duration of fever after initiation of antibiotic therapy, were more likely to develop rheumatoid factor.
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PMID:Rheumatoid factor in acute bacterial endocarditis. 96 70

To evaluate the role of immunoglobulins, complement, circulating immune complexes (CIC), heart antibodies (HAb) and rheumatoid factor (RF) in infective endocarditis, we studied 28 consecutive patients before and after therapy. Statistically significant elevation was seen in IgG (p less than 0.001) and IgA (P less than 0.001) level prior to initiation of therapy as compared to a control group. Following drug treatment a fall was noted in IgA (P less than 0.01) and IgM (p less than 0.01) level as compared to basal values. Low C3 levels were seen in those with renal involvement (p less than 0.05). CIC levels estimated by 4% PEG precipitation assay were found to be elevated in 64% of patients. Patients with shorter duration of illness (less than three months) had higher levels of CIC containing IgG (P less than 0.005), IgA (P less than 0.05) and IgM (P less than 0.05), as compared to those with a longer duration. Initial CIC levels did not predict the clinical course and were found to be of no value in prognosis, although an improvement in congestive heart failure was associated with a rise in C3 (P less than 0.05) and IgM (P less than 0.05) containing CIC and an overall clinical improvement with a rise in IgA (p less than 0.05) containing CIC. There was no statistically significant difference in CIC level, for the entire group studied, before and after therapy. Patients who had rheumatoid factor in their initial serum sample demonstrated a fall in IgG, IgA and IgM containing CIC and a rise in C3 with therapy. The converse was true for those who lacked RF.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Immunologic parameters in infective endocarditis: a prospective study. 180 Mar 4

Serum samples from 22 patients with infective endocarditis were analysed for the presence of antibodies to cardiolipin, false positive Venereal Disease Research Laboratory (VDRL) test, and rheumatoid factor in order to determine the prevalence of anticardiolipin antibodies, their level, and to ascertain whether there was any correlation with the presence of rheumatoid factor. Although the latex test was positive in 10/22 (45%) patients, anticardiolipin antibodies, usually of a low level, were raised in only four (18%), and the VDRL test was positive in two patients in whom other antibodies were negative. These results show a clear discordance between these three tests, indicating that B cell production of these antibodies is separate and distinct. As with other infections which result in anticardiolipin antibody production, no thrombotic events were encountered.
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PMID:Infective endocarditis, rheumatoid factor, and anticardiolipin antibodies. 231 11

Nailfold capillary microscopy was used to study the microcirculation patterns in 26 adult patients with infective endocarditis. Abnormal patterns were found in 13 patients (50%). Enlargement of capillary loops was never observed. Significant correlations were found between the number of capillary abnormalities and both systemic involvement (cutaneous vasculitis, arthritis, splenomegaly and/or glomerulonephritis) and immunological disturbances (circulating immune complexes, rheumatoid factor and/or hypocomplementemia) (p = 0.02 and 0.003, respectively). Capillary abnormalities were significantly reduced in 14 patients studied 4 to 48 months after endocarditis was cured. However, due to the lack of specificity, nailfold capillary microscopy cannot be regarded as a useful tool for the diagnosis of infective endocarditis. Connective tissue disorders are not the sole diagnosis to be considered in patients with abnormal nailfold capillary microcirculation patterns.
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PMID:[Cutaneous microcirculation in infectious endocarditis]. 253 85

The authors report a case of infectious spondylodiscitis revealing a staphylococcal endocarditis in a patient with a Carpentier aortic heterograft. This case, along with 60 descriptions from the literature, has enabled them to specify the characteristics of occurrence of endocarditis during a spondylodiscitis. The clinical factors in favor of this association are: a pre-existing cardiopathy, an oral port of entry, occurrence of other rheumatoid manifestations, even more the presence of complications of endocarditis. The laboratory factors in favor of an association are: discovery of an inflammatory anemia, of circulating immune complexes, of a cryoglobulinemia, of a rheumatoid factor, of hematuria. But it is mostly the demonstration of streptococcus in blood cultures and other samples that should be an indication to search for an endocarditis, the course of which dominates the prognosis.
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PMID:[Spondylodiscitis disclosing bacterial endocarditis. Apropos of a case. Review of the literature]. 266 Jul 30

Multiple visceral aneurysms complicating periarteritis nodosa are considered characteristic, though not pathognomonic, on arteriography. This arteriographic pattern has been described with hairy-cell leukemia, collagen vascular disorders, and atrial myxoma, but, to our knowledge, has not been previously reported with subacute bacterial endocarditis. A patient with enterococcal endocarditis sustained separate intra-abdominal hemorrhages, 24 hours apart, from aneurysms of the middle colic and left colic arteries. Sterile vessel cultures with inflammatory infiltrates, decreased complement levels, positive rheumatoid factor, and arteriographic evidence of multiple visceral aneurysms suggest the vasculitis was immunologically mediated and not mycotic. Antibiotic therapy after control of hemorrhage controlled abdominal symptoms.
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PMID:Multiple mesenteric aneurysms complicating subacute bacterial endocarditis. 288 83


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