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

Endocarditis caused by Candida albicans was induced in rabbits after insertion of a catheter across the aortic valve. The mean survival time of 34 rabbits was 26 days. Only 7% of temperature recordings taken were elevated. Candida was recovered from only 9% of blood cultures taken. Precipitating and agglutinating serum antibody was detected after 12 days of infection. Antibody titers rose progressively until death in rabbits with endocarditis, whereas titers peaked early and subsequently decreased in animals that received an intravenous injection of C. albicans without precatheterization. Three groups of rabbits were treated for 6 days with amphotericin B, 5-fluorocytosine, or the two durgs in combination. Amphotericin B alone reduced the mean titer of organisms from log10 8.79 +/- 1.46 to log 10 3.1 +/- 1.9 colony-forming units/g. 5-Fluorocytosine was less effective (mean titer after 6 days of therapy was log10 7.4 +/- 0.33 colony-forming units/g). The addition of 5-fluorocytosine to amphotericin B did not increase the rate at which Candida cells were eradicated from the vegetations. These in vivo results corrleated with the failure to demonstrate an increased rate of fungicidal activity in vitro with the two drugs.
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PMID:Experimental Candida albicans endocarditis: characterization of the disease and response to therapy. 32 93

The fungicidal effect of amphotericin B and 5-fluorocytosine (5-FC) on fungi incorporated into blood and fibrin clots was investigated. Amphotericin B was ineffective against fungi incorporated into blood clots, but effective in the eradication of fungi in fibrin clots. 5-FC was ineffective both against fungi incorporated in blood clots as well as in fibrin clots. The combination of 5-FC and amphotericin B was likewise ineffective against fungi incorporated into blood clots. The failure of these drugs to penetrate blood clots may explain the treatment failure in fungal endocarditis.
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PMID:Amphotericin B and 5-fluorocytosine penetration into blood and fibrin clots. 57 95

The efficacy of fluconazole, a bis-triazole antifungal agent, for prophylaxis and treatment of endocarditis due to Candida albicans and Candida parapsilosis is assessed in a rabbit model. Fourteen daily injections of fluconazole at doses of 20 and 10 mg/kg of body weight eradicated C. albicans and C. parapsilosis, respectively, from the cardiac vegetations in all animals tested. Amphotericin B (3 mg/kg) and flucytosine (35 mg/kg) both singly and in combination failed to achieve eradication in 100% of the animals. A two-dose prophylactic regimen of 30 mg of fluconazole/kg was consistently successful in preventing experimental endocarditis caused by C. albicans or C. parapsilosis.
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PMID:Efficacy of fluconazole in prophylaxis and treatment of experimental Candida endocarditis. 218 7

A 34-year-old man, a heavy drinker, was admitted with a high fever and hematuria two months previously. Surgery was performed for acute sever pancreatitis and postoperatively antibiotics were administered with intravenous hyperalimentation. After discharge he was readmitted and infective endocarditis was strongly suspected because of high fever, hematuria, Osler's nodes, Janeway's lesions, splinter hemorrhages and mitral regurgitation. Penicillin G in combination with Gentamycine therapy was started on the first hospital day. On the second hospital day, blood culture revealed Candida tropicalis so Miconazole therapy was commenced. On the forth hospital day, he underwent surgery for replacement of a mitral prosthesis with a prosthetic valve because he had embolus in the radial artery. Despite intensive antifungal therapy, he showed no improvement in clinical symptoms. Then we changed the antifungal drug from Miconazole to Amphotericin B and 5-fluorocytosine. On the 109th hospital day, his clinical symptoms improved. Antifungal therapy was halted and at present 10 months later, he is healthy.
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PMID:[A successfully treated case of infective endocarditis due to Candida tropicalis]. 221 59

No controlled trials of therapy for invasive aspergillosis have been done. This review appraises 2,121 cases reported in 497 articles in the literature and analyzes 440 courses of treatment of infection at various body sites in 379 patients. The exclusion of early failures of therapy skews the results toward a favorable outcome. The rate of response to amphotericin B is 55%. Mortality from pulmonary aspergillosis in bone marrow transplant recipients exceeds 94% regardless of therapy, as does that from cerebral aspergillosis in all hosts. Amphotericin B (1 mg/[kg.d]) with flucytosine lowers mortality in neutropenic patients with pulmonary aspergillosis who did not receive a bone marrow transplant; relapse is common. Surgical debridement of aspergillus maxillary sinusitis is usually curative in nonimmunocompromised patients, whereas it increases mortality among neutropenic patients. Valve replacement is essential for aspergillus endocarditis. Both vitrectomy and intravitreal amphotericin B treatment are essential for aspergillus endophthalmitis. Flucytosine is somewhat useful clinically. Itraconazole shows efficacy in the treatment of pulmonary, skeletal, and pericardial aspergillosis. Although liposomal amphotericin B is less toxic than standard preparations of the drug, relevant data are limited. The proposed potentiation of amphotericin B by rifampin is unsupported by clinical data. Despite "conventional" therapy, mortality from invasive aspergillosis remains high; new approaches must be investigated.
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PMID:Antifungal and surgical treatment of invasive aspergillosis: review of 2,121 published cases. 226 90

Three cases of osteoarthritis due to dematiaceous fungi are reported. The first case, a Drechslera longirostrata spondylitis complicating prosthetic valve fungal endocarditis responded only to the association of Amphotericin B and Ketoconazole. The second patient had chronic osteoarthritis of the knee due to Phialophora parasitica resistant to medical and surgical treatment after renal transplantation. These two cases are the first and the second known reports of clinical infection with these fungi. The third patient had osteoarthritis of the patella complicating a skin infection by a thorn prick. This was cured by surgical excision and 3 months' medical treatment. These cases of infections osteoarthritis of the knee followed subcutaneous abscesses. Deep tissue infections with dematiaceous fungi with osteoarthritic involvement are very rare (6 cases of Drechslera and 8 cases of Phialophora have been reported). These fungi are opportunist saprophytes of plants in subtropical regions. They are characterised on culture by their brown and black pigmentation and microscopy shows septated filaments. Cutaneous effraction is the usual portal of entry in man; patients commonly have depression of their immune systems. Osteoarthritis is generally due to local extension of a subcutaneous abscess. The functional sequellae can be very serious. Treatment comprises surgical excision of the infected tissues with antifungal drugs which may have to be given in association.
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PMID:[Osteoarthritis caused by dematiaceous fungi. Apropos of 3 cases]. 406 37

Amphotericin B and N-D-ornithyl amphotericin B methyl ester were compared for therapeutic efficacies against experimentally induced cryptococcal meningitis and Candida albicans endocarditis with pyelonephritis in rabbits. Antifungal activity of the two polyenes in vitro was similar for the yeasts used in these experiments. N-D-ornithyl amphotericin B methyl ester gave a slightly higher concentration in serum than amphotericin B did, but both drugs had similar elimination curves, and penetration into the cerebrospinal fluid was poor for both. Despite these similarities between the two polyenes, amphotericin B was much more effective than N-D-ornithyl amphotericin B methyl ester in the treatment of cryptococcal meningitis in rabbits. For C. albicans endocarditis, both polyenes had similar cure rates, but in vitro measurement of fungicidal activity in serum did not predict treatment outcome. For C. albicans pyelonephritis, both polyenes showed efficacy; because higher doses of the less toxic methyl ester could be used, it sterilized the urinary tract more often than amphotericin B. These studies indicate that in vivo and in vitro experiments may be needed to predict the results of treatment with polyenes.
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PMID:Comparison of amphotericin B and N-D-ornithyl amphotericin B methyl ester in experimental cryptococcal meningitis and Candida albicans endocarditis with pyelonephritis. 408 60

Amphotericin B, nystatin, clotrimazole and candicidin have been compared as antifungal agents in a sterilizing mixture for allograft tissues used in cardiac surgery. Candicidin was shown to be too toxic, and clotrimazole has since been restricted to topical application. Nystatin and amphotericin B are equally effective in controlling fungal contamination when compared in terms of effectiveness, cytotoxicity and cost. Early onset fungal endocarditis associated with allograft tissue treated in this way can be reduced to a minimum by an appreciation of these results and an application of rigorous screening procedures for fungi.
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PMID:Antifungal treatment of allograft tissue for cardiac surgery. 729 8

Dysphagia and retrosternal pain are common complaints in patients after cardiac operations, and most often they result from the median sternotomy and/or endotracheal intubation. Although Candida esophagitis is a recognized cause of similar symptoms, it is usually not suspected except in immunologically compromised hosts. This report describes the case histories of five patients, not immunosuppressed or cachectic, who developed persistent dysphagia during recovery from cardiac operations; four patients received only 4 days of preoperative and postoperative prophylactic antibiotic treatment with cefazolin (Kefzol) and cephalexin (Keflex). A nasogastric tube had been used for less than 24 hours in the postoperative period. The fifth patient developed symptoms following prolonged and varied antibiotic therapy. Candida esophagitis was diagnosed by a combination of coexisting oral candidiasis (5/5), roentgenographic appearance on barium swallow (5/5), endoscopy (4/4), and biopsy or culture (2/4). Initial therapy consisted of antireflux measures and antacids (4/5), cimetidine (4/5), oral nystatin in methylcellulose base (1,000,000 units every 4 hours) (4/5), and termination of other antibiotic therapy (1/5). These measures were effective in clearing the infection in only two patients. A third patient required prolonged massive oral nystatin therapy, and in two patients intravenous Amphotericin B was necessary to control infection. Two patients subsequently developed strictures which necessitated multiple esophageal dilatations. One of these patients developed endocarditis during home dilatation therapy. All patients are currently free of disease. Current measures utilized to recognize and treat the disease are discussed.
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PMID:Candida esophagitis following cardiac operation and short-term antibiotic prophylaxis. 743 63

Amphotericin B and fluconazole were compared for the treatment of experimental Candida endocarditis caused by Candida tropicalis and C. parapsilosis. Rabbits received no therapy, amphotericin B (1 mg/kg of body weight per day intravenously), or fluconazole (100 mg/kg/day intraperitoneally) for either 11 or 21 days. Against both species, amphotericin B and fluconazole were equally effective overall; however, amphotericin B was more rapidly fungicidal than fluconazole in vivo against C. tropicalis.
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PMID:Comparison of fluconazole and amphotericin B for treatment of experimental Candida endocarditis caused by non-C. albicans strains. 823 28


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