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

Infective endocarditis is one of the most rare complications of patent ductus arteriosus (PDA). Usually vegetations are localised at the level of the patent ductus and can involve the left branch and the trunk of the pulmonary artery. We report the case of a young woman with PDA, who was admitted to the hospital in severe congestive heart failure due to infective endocarditis. A 2D echocardiographic examination revealed vegetations into the ductus with extension to the pulmonary artery, pulmonary valve and aortic valve. The results of the echocardiographic study enabled us to evaluate the extension of the lesions, to avoid heart catheterization and to decide the most suitable surgical approach for repairing all the damage in one surgical operation.
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PMID:[Echocardiographic diagnosis of infectious endocarditis on patent ductus arteriosus with involvement of the pulmonary artery and the pulmonary and aortic semilunar valves. Description of a case]. 380 1

Infective endocarditis remains a serious illness with a high mortality. In more than 75% of 417 patients, the infection was due to gram-positive microorganisms. The non-drug-addicted patients (33%) were elderly and debilitated with advanced illness that preceded the endocarditis. The drug-addicted patients (67%) were young and were infected with multiple kinds of microorganisms. The blood cultures grew strains of Staphylococcus aureus resistant to methicillin sodium and nafcillin sodium in a majority of patients. Gram-negative microorganisms and fungi were cultured almost exclusively from samples from the drug-addicted patients. The high mortality among the non-drug-addicted patients (28%) was related to their advanced age and debilitating illness. The high mortality among the drug-addicted patients (21%) was related to the complex bacteriology of their infections and the severe anatomical disruption of the valvular complexes of the heart. When cured of their disease after treatment with intravenously administered antibiotics or a valve procedure or both, their long-term survival was related to whether or not they abstained from their habit. If the patient abstained from the use of drugs, the chances of survival were good; if not, death invariably ensued. This experience strongly supports our contention that if a patient returns to the use of drugs and reinfects the valve after initial cure, a second valve operation is contraindicated.
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PMID:Management of infective endocarditis: seventeen years' experience. 381 2

Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) has become endemic in Detroit, accounting for 50% of bacteremias in heroin abusers. To identify the salient epidemiologic and clinical features of MRSA bacteremia, case-control studies were performed comparing 28 cases of MRSA bacteremia to 28 cases of methicillin-sensitive S. aureus (MSSA) bacteremia in intravenous drug abusers. Infective endocarditis was diagnosed in 46.4% (13 of 28). In endocarditis and nonendocarditis bacteremia alike, the duration of fever, length of hospitalization, need for surgery, and mortality rates were similar. A history of recent antimicrobial therapy, especially cephalosporins, was more common in the MRSA group (p = 0.006). Complications including neurologic, renal, vascular, and musculoskeletal manifestations were more common in the MSSA endocarditis patients than MRSA endocarditis patients, although this difference was not significant. Complications related to antibiotic therapy were similar for both groups. The case-control studies indicate that MRSA and MSSA are similar in their virulence as measured by duration of hospitalization, duration of fever, complications, and mortality.
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PMID:Comparison of methicillin-resistant and methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia. 384 69

Infective endocarditis is an important but uncommon complication in obstetric or gynecologic practice; we found only 124 cases reported in English and selected European papers during the last 40 years. The majority of cases (74%) were caused by streptococci; viridans streptococci predominated, while enterococci and group B streptococci were uncommon except after abortion. The overall mortality rate was 29%, while the mortality rate for the fetus when the mother developed infective endocarditis was 23%. The incidence of endocarditis in this setting is low and seems to be decreasing. Therefore, the risk-benefit ratio may not favor routine use of prophylaxis for endocarditis. We conclude that antibiotics need not be given for prevention of endocarditis before most common obstetric and gynecologic procedures. These include uncomplicated vaginal deliveries, uncomplicated spontaneous or induced abortions, dilatation and curettage, insertion or removal of intrauterine contraceptive devices (in the absence of pelvic infection), and biopsies of the cervix. For patients in whom both the underlying heart lesion and the obstetric or gynecologic procedure seem to pose significant risk for endocarditis, prophylaxis should be given. Two parenteral regimens for patients at highest risk are recommended: ampicillin plus gentamicin or vancomycin plus gentamicin. For lower-risk situations, one oral regimen is suggested: amoxicillin.
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PMID:Infective endocarditis in obstetric and gynecologic practice. 394 92

Infective endocarditis has become a disease affecting primarily elderly persons. The etiology of infective endocarditis in the elderly is predominantly streptococci and staphylococci. The clinical features of this infection in the aged may be atypical or nonspecific, which often leads to delays in diagnosis. Mortality is extremely high for elderly patients with infective endocarditis.
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PMID:Infective endocarditis in the aging patient. 638 11

Infective endocarditis is the most common condition predisposing a patient to splenic abscess, and the conditions of 37 such patients are reviewed herein. Streptococci accounted for 18 abscesses, with six containing enterococci; 12 other contained staphylococci. Symptoms suggesting splenic abscess include abdominal distention, hiccups, and pain in the left flank, abdomen, and shoulder. Physical signs include recurrent or persistent fever and abdominal tenderness, with splenomegaly often inapparent. The most frequent finding on x-ray film is pleural effusion on the left side. Seventeen patients not undergoing splenectomy died; in these, the diagnosis of splenic abscess was established postmortem. Twenty patients underwent splenectomy, 19 of whom received antibiotics and survived; one patient who was not treated with antibiotics died. Physicians should suspect splenic abscess in patients with endocarditis, particularly those with staphylococcal or enterococcal endocarditis. Those patients with clinical evidence suggestive of splenic abscess should undergo specific diagnostic studies, and exploratory laparotomy may be necessary.
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PMID:Splenic abscess complicating infectious endocarditis. 667 35

Eighty-three patients aged 11 months to 25 years were followed up a median of 6.1 years (range 8 days to 24 years) after diagnosis of fixed subaortic stenosis (SAS). Fourteen (17%) had significant noncardiac defects and 47 (57%) had additional cardiac malformations. The left ventricular (LV) outflow gradient increased in 25 of 26 patients catheterized more than once before surgery. Of 15 patients less than 12 years old with gradients less than or equal to 40 mm Hg, 10 ultimately underwent operation after developing severe obstruction; another has progressed to a gradient of 45 mm Hg at 6 years of age. Before surgery (at a median age of 12 years), 55% had aortic regurgitation (AR), which was usually mild. Infective endocarditis occurred in 12% of the group, with a frequency of 14.3 cases per 1,000 patient-years. Seventy-four patients were operated on, with 6 early (8%) and 7 late (9%) deaths. Twelve underwent reoperation to relieve residual obstruction. Surgery reduced gradients in patients with discrete SAS from 83 +/- 33 to 29 +/- 30 mm Hg, but in 6 patients with tunnel SAS the reduction was less satisfactory. AR was absent or mild in most patients postoperatively. When the gradient was reduced to less than 80 mm Hg, infective endocarditis did not occur unless there were other residual lesions. These data suggest that it is reasonable to resect discrete SAS in children less than 10 to 12 years old with LV outflow gradients greater than or equal to 30 mm Hg.
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PMID:Fixed subaortic stenosis in the young: medical and surgical course in 83 patients. 668 79

Infective endocarditis is associated with a high mortality, but previous studies have suggested that the major complications of the condition might be prevented by early surgery. Of 50 patients treated for infective endocarditis at the Montreal Heart Institute from 1977 to 1982, 30 were treated nonsurgically and the remaining 20 underwent early valve replacement before preoperative antibiotic therapy was completed. Of these 20, 14 had native valve endocarditis and 6 prosthetic valve endocarditis. The organisms involved were Streptococcus sp in 11, Staphylococcus aureus in 2, gram-negative organisms in 3 and Candida parapsilosis in 1. Blood cultures remained negative in three patients. There were three early deaths (15%) following operation and one late death (5%). Infection on implanted prostheses did not recur, but reoperation was required in one patient because of prosthetic dehiscence 7 months after initial implantation. All resected valves displayed evidence of infection. Follow-up was obtained in all survivors. After an average follow-up of 26 months, 12 patients remained in functional class I and 4 in class II (New York Heart Association classification). Early valve replacement has resulted in improved survival of patients with infective endocarditis and is now associated with a low operative mortality and morbidity.
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PMID:Early valve replacement in active infective endocarditis. 674 47

The epidemiologic, clinical, and microbiologic patterns of infective endocarditis have been undergoing constant change. Prompt diagnosis of infective endocarditis requires clinical suspicion in proper clinical settings and appropriate laboratory tests. Once the infecting organism is identified in blood cultures, the majority of patients with infective endocarditis can be cured by prolonged, intensive antimicrobial therapy. Surgical intervention may be needed in certain patients. Infective endocarditis may be prevented in some patients by the elimination of predisposing factors. Patients with underlying heart diseases should receive antimicrobial prophylaxis immediately before undergoing surgical procedures that are associated with significant risks of bacteremia.
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PMID:Diagnosis, management, and prevention of infective endocarditis. 691 93

Candidosis was recognized retrospectively in the hearts of 20 of 8,975 patients (0.2%) who had complete postmortem examinations done in Central Kentucky and South Florida. This mycosis, characterized by myocardial micro-abscesses with yeasts and pseudohyphal elements in 18 patients, was the most common fungal cardiac infection. Noncaseating granulomas were seen in only one patient. Infective endocarditis due to Candida species was found in seven individuals and involved the mitral valve most frequently. The 20 infected persons varied in age from 20 days to 65 years, with a mean age of 37 years, and included 11 males and nine females. All had compromising, usually benign, underlying diseases complicated by antibiotic therapy for suspected or proven Gram-negative sepsis. Typically, these patients were extremely ill, and eight had recognized conduction disturbances including altered heart rates and rhythms. Deep candidosis was considered a major factor in every patient's death. Experimental deep candidosis in 12 infected, adult laboratory rats was characterized by similar haphazardly scattered myocardial microabscesses with fungal elements in eight (67%). Endocarditis in the rats was not seen in this intracardiac injection model. Widespread antibiotic exposure in patients who have compromising underlying diseases portends an increasing incidence of deep candidosis, which as the potential to infect any tissue, particularly the heart, and to create cardiac arrhythmias and death.
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PMID:The potentially lethal problem of cardiac candidosis. 698 62


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