Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0014118 (endocarditis)
15,629 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 47-year-old man who had a pacemaker implanted 2 years earlier, recently developed a fever and had been on antibiotics for 2 months. He presented with pulmonary emboli, and underwent lead extraction and emboli removal. Histopathology demonstrated Aspergillus. Amphotericin B was continued postoperatively. This rare case of pacemaker lead endocarditis suggests that vigorous medical and surgical intervention can be curative.
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PMID:Aspergillus pacemaker lead endocarditis. 2453 25

Kodameae ohmeri is an emerging pathogen in various types of infections. Most infections are seen in patients with compromised immunity like cancer patients. Few cases of neonatal infections due to K. ohmeri have been reported earlier in premature neonates with fatal outcomes. We report two cases of fungemia; the first case was a patient with hematological malignancy, who complained of fever spikes and grew K. ohmeri in blood despite prophylactic voriconazole therapy. The second case was in a mature neonate, who developed respiratory distress and features of sepsis two days after birth, multiple blood cultures were positive for K. ohmeri. Both the patients responded well to Amphotericin B. Repeat blood cultures were sterile and patients were discharged. K. ohmeri is an unusual and emerging fungal pathogen of late an increasing number of cases of fungemia, funguria, endocarditis, peritonitis and wound infections due to the same are being reported. Some occur in immunocompromised patients and some inapparently immunocompetent patients, neonates with an inclination for preterm babies. We report two case of fungemia, one with lymphoma and the second in a neonate.
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PMID:Kodameae ohmeri - An Emerging Yeast: Two Cases and Literature Review. 2595 19

We provide a review of current literature and report on a case of electronic device infective endocarditis with C. tropicalis. A 64-year-old man presented for revision of his implantable cardioverter defibrillator. Echocardiography revealed extensive vegetations attached to the Eustachian valve and in the right ventricular apex. Microbiological findings presented C. tropicalis on the explanted material. The patient refused additional surgical intervention. We successfully treated the patient with liposomal Amphotericin B and Flucytosine for 8 weeks.
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PMID:Candida tropicalis defibrillator endocarditis: A case report and review of current literature. 3124 69


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