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

The anesthetic management of a woman with Eisenmenger's syndrome undergoing abdominal hysterectomy with general anesthesia is described. Proper anesthetic management of patients with this syndrome depends on a knowledge of the pathophysiologic process and associated complications. The potential problems of systemic hypotension, pulmonary embolism and infective endocarditis are outlined. Sudden death is a common and pregnancy is a major hazard.
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PMID:General anesthesia in Eisenmenger's syndrome. 58 42

Major surgical procedures, especially when performed under general anesthesia, can depress immunological parameters measured in vitro. Therefore concern has been expressed that operation might have an adverse effect on the immune status of individuals infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Four HIV-positive patients without symptoms of HIV disease underwent cardiac valve replacement in consequence of infective endocarditis. After up to 15 months postoperatively, 3 patients are alive and well without signs of progressive immunodeficiency or recurrent endocarditis. One patient died of recurrent endocarditis without evidence of HIV-related disease on autopsy. Cardiac operation does not seem to accelerate HIV-related immunodeficiency.
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PMID:Cardiac valve replacement in patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus. 151 May 25

In adults transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) has become a well-established method for the assessment of cardiac malformations. In children the transthoracic approach (TTE) gives excellent resolution and cardiac malformations can be well defined in most of the cases. Uncertainty may, nevertheless, exist in complex anomalies in spite of TTE and angiography or after surgical interventions. Recently pediatric 5-mHz TEE probes have been developed with acceptable diameters of 6, 9 and 11 mm. The feasibility and the potential risks of TEE were studied in 47 patients, aged from 5 months to 16 years (mean 5 9/12 years), weighing from 5 to 47 kg (mean 19.7 kg). 35 children had congenital malformations: 15 VSD + PS, 5 VSD + PHT, 3 ASD, 5 A-V canal malformations, 1 tricuspid atresia, 2 subvalvar aortic stenosis, 3 endocarditis, 1 normal. Twelve children had rheumatic heart disease. Eight patients had more than 1 TEE. The examination was performed either under general anaesthesia just before of after surgical intervention in 32 or under sedation and with local anaesthesia in the others. There was no complication, but in 3 intubated children under 3 years of age TEE was not possible; obstruction of the endotracheal tube occurred. Adequate imaging was obtained in most of the children with one or the other probe. Additional information was obtained in 28 patients (52%). In 5 of them these informations modified the surgical procedure. We conclude that TEE is feasible in children and has a low risk of complications when practised with care.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Transesophageal echocardiography--is it indicated for children undergoing heart surgery?]. 158 55

The effect of high dose aprotinin was evaluated in a prospective study on 100 patients undergoing cardiopulmonary bypass. Special attention was made on postoperative blood loss and transfusions of bank blood postoperatively. In the first part of the study, after induction of anesthesia, a loading dose of 2,000,000 kallikrein-inhibiting-unit (KIU) = 280 mg aprotinin was given intravenously over a 30-min period. Immediately afterward, a continuous infusion of 500,000 KIU/h was started and maintained until skin closure. Another 2,000,000 KIU was added to the priming volume of the heart-lung machine. A control group of 50 patients was randomized with similar indication for surgery and past cardiac history. The total loss from the thoracic drains was significantly reduced in the aprotinin group as compared with the loss in the control group (490 +/- 265 ml versus 1045 +/- 380 ml). In a separate group of risk patients (redo-operations, infective endocarditis) the total blood loss was even more significant reduced in the aprotinin group (690 +/- 195 ml versus 1585 +/- 290 ml). Patients of the aprotinin group received markedly less bank blood postoperatively (350 +/- 100 ml versus 900 +/- 240 ml without aprotinin). Part II of the study (36 patients) consisted of lower dosage (2,000,000 KIU intravenously during induction of anesthesia only or 2,000,000 KIU in the priming volume of the heart-lung machine only). Patients who received aprotinin in the heart-lung machine only showed no significant difference regarding blood loss and blood requirement to patients with high dose aprotinin. It appears possible that aprotinin reduces the activation of the coagulation during cardiopulmonary bypass and preserves platelet function without affecting platelet consumption during the extracorporeal circulation. The results of our study demonstrate that high dose aprotinin markedly reduces blood loss as well as homologous blood requirement in the early postoperative course of cardiosurgical patients. Similar effects due to reduced aprotinin dose have been observed in patients receiving aprotinin in the extracorporeal circulation only.
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PMID:[Reduction of postoperative blood loss and donor blood use in heart surgery with aprotinin: experience with various dosages]. 172 85

A prospective clinical study was carried out to assess the adequacy of perioperative antibiotic prophylaxis using fosfomycin in patients undergoing open-heart surgery for valve diseases for the prevention of early postoperative endocarditis, as well as for serious mediastinal infections that are caused mostly by multiresistant staphylococci and Gram-negative bacteria. Perioperative pharmacokinetics and tissue penetration were determined within the harvested heart valves and subcutaneous tissue. Reliable bactericidal serum levels were established at the first measurement 10 min after the end of intravenous infusion (203.7 +/- 44.7 micrograms/ml) and were maintained during surgery for at least 120 min (124.6 +/- 58.4 micrograms/ml), even in cases of prolonged extracorporeal circulation. Cardiopulmonary bypass did not alter the serum elimination of fosfomycin in comparison with patients not undergoing extracorporeal circulation. Peak tissue concentrations were achieved in both aortic and mitral valves after 30 min, ranging between 27.1 and 76.9 micrograms/g for aortic valves and 39.6-69.4 micrograms/g for mitral valves, depending on the degree of valvular degeneration. MIC values of 16 micrograms/g were maintained in both valves for at least up to 60 min. There was no evidence of renal impairment, adverse reactions or infections during the postoperative course or thereafter for a period of 3 months. It is concluded that perioperative intravenous antibiotic prophylaxis using fosfomycin (5 g t.i.d. in adults), beginning with induction of anesthesia and continued for 48 h postoperatively, provides rapid, reliable bactericidal serum levels and valvular tissue concentrations that will inhibit most Gram-positive and Gram-negative organisms that cause bacterial endocarditis and other serious infections following cardiac surgery.
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PMID:[Perioperative preventive antibiotic treatment with fosfomycin in heart surgery: serum kinetics in extracorporeal circulation and determination of concentration in heart valve tissue]. 223 72

Infective endocarditis is a serious disease with a continuing mortality of approximately 20%. Risk factors include a variety of congenital and acquired heart diseases. Infection follows an episode of bacteraemia which is most commonly due to oral bacteria, notably streptococci. Less commonly bacteraemia may arise from surgical procedures or diseases of the gastrointestinal and genitourinary tracts or from sepsis at other body sites, including intravenous drug abuse. Several societies and associations have published recommendations for the prevention of bacteraemia in those at risk from endocarditis through the use of perioperative antibiotic chemoprophylaxis. The recommendations are targetted at patients with defined cardiovascular lesions undergoing dental and other procedures known to predictably produce bacteraemia. The major recommendations for standard risk patients undergoing dental procedures without general anaesthesia is high-dose oral penicillin or amoxycillin. Alternative agents include erythromycin and clindamycin. For those requiring general anaesthesia, parenteral regimens are generally recommended although the British Society for Antimicrobial Chemotherapy permits an oral amoxycillin regimen 4 hours preoperatively. For specified gastrointestinal and genitourinary procedures a 2-drug regimen of ampicillin/amoxycillin (or vancomycin for penicillin-allergic patients) plus an aminoglycoside is generally recommended. The emphasis has been to simplify the earlier regimens without compromising the antimicrobial protection with a view to encouraging maximum compliance. The latter continues to be a problem where drug recommendations are either complex or include multiple drug or dosage recommendations. The emphasis on maintaining good dental health is endorsed by all authorities.
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PMID:Chemoprophylaxis of infective endocarditis. 228 93

In patients with mechanical mitral prosthesis, the presence of dysfunction and regurgitation of the prosthesis may be difficult to assess by standard precordial color flow Doppler. Moreover, the kind of mitral prosthesis regurgitant jet is often impossible to determine. We have recently studied 4 patients with clinically suspected mitral prosthesis dysfunction. In all of them the conventional transthoracic color flow technique was unable to evidentiate prosthesis regurgitation, whereas the transesophageal color flow Doppler assessed a partial displacement with a peri-prosthetic regurgitation in 3 patients, and a prosthetic endocarditis with intra-prosthetic regurgitation in 1. All studies were performed using an Aloka SSD 860 and 5 MHz transesophageal color Doppler transducer, using a topical anesthesia with 10% lidocaine. The procedure was well tolerated without any complication in all patients. Transesophageal color flow Doppler has specific improved capabilities over transthoracic conventional color flow Doppler and represents an important advance even for the noninvasive evaluation of patients with suspected mitral prosthesis regurgitation.
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PMID:[Transesophageal color-coded Doppler echocardiography: diagnosis of regurgitation of mitral valve prosthesis]. 273 63

Teicoplanin 400 mg, given as an intravenous bolus dose after induction of general anaesthesia, was highly effective in reducing the prevalence of streptococcal bacteraemia following dental extraction. Pulse rate and blood pressure monitoring did not show any adverse cardiovascular reactions after this dose which was extremely well tolerated. Blood samples were collected from adult patients for culture and antibiotic assay about two minutes after the dental procedure. Viridans streptococci were isolated from one of 40 patients receiving teicoplanin (2.5%) compared with 13 of 40 (32.5%) control patients. Another group of patients investigated received amoxycillin 1.0 g, intramuscularly shortly before anaesthesia, and viridans streptococci were isolated from 10 of 40 (25%) patients in this group. The mean serum teicoplanin and amoxycillin concentrations at the time of extraction were 37 and 10 mg/l respectively. Although amoxycillin was administered with lignocaine patients occasionally complained of pain following intramuscular injection. The results of this study suggest that the 400 mg intravenous bolus dose of teicoplanin is more suitable than 1.0 g intramuscular amoxycillin for the parenteral prophylaxis of streptococcal endocarditis in patients with cardiac lesions who require a dental procedure. Also as the teicoplanin dose is easy to administer and free of cardiovascular reactions or 'red man' syndrome it is probably more suitable than vancomycin for providing prophylaxis in patients allergic to penicillin.
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PMID:Comparison of intravenous teicoplanin with intramuscular amoxycillin for the prophylaxis of streptococcal bacteraemia in dental patients. 295 48

Two-dimensional transesophageal echocardiography generally has superior sensitivity and image quality compared with precordial echocardiography. Its unique anatomic perspective posterior to the heart often provides important clinical information not obtainable by other imaging approaches and technologies. It is particularly useful in the diagnosis of mitral valve disease, left atrial masses, endocarditis and its sequelae, and aortic dissections. It is also useful for examination of the left main coronary artery, left ventricular outflow tract, atrial and ventricular septa, and congenital defects. In addition to its application as a diagnostic tool in conscious patients, it can be employed intraoperatively to evaluate and guide surgical intervention. Detection of ventricular wall motion abnormalities by transesophageal echocardiography has been shown to be the most sensitive indicator of myocardial ischemia available in the clinical setting. It has potential for wide application for safely monitoring left ventricular function in patients in intensive care or under anesthesia.
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PMID:Transesophageal echocardiography. 233 46

In the U.K. and Europe there are now simple oral chemoprophylaxis recommendations which are likely to be widely complied with by patients, dental and medical practitioners. The main recommendations of the 1982 BSAC Endocarditis Working Party report and the 1985 report of the European Society of Cardiology are similar and involve the administration of a single 3 g dose of oral amoxycillin 1 h before the procedure, or two doses of erythromycin for patients allergic to penicillin. Amoxycillin is more suitable than penicillin V for single dose chemoprophylaxis because of its higher and more persistent serum bactericidal concentrations and lower serum protein binding compared with penicillin V. Controversies about the precautions needed for patients with prosthetic valves are discussed. Erythromycin is associated with more frequent gastrointestinal side-effects and less reliable absorption than amoxycillin. None the less, recent studies suggest that the 1.5 g loading dose of oral erythromycin stearate has an 'immediate' effect in reducing post-extraction streptococcal bacteraemia and appears to be reasonably well tolerated by most adults. In 1986 a few changes have been suggested by the BSAC Endocarditis Working Party and concern the use of alternative oral amoxycillin regimens for patients requiring general anaesthesia, the giving of two administrations of amoxycillin within one month when prophylaxis is required for repeated dental procedures and the slower infusion of intravenous vancomycin to reduce the incidence of adverse reactions. A register of cases of failed chemoprophylaxis' has been started in the U.K. and also in Europe.
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PMID:Antibiotic prophylaxis of infective endocarditis in the United Kingdom and Europe. 311 57


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