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

The increasingly frequent use of endomyocardial biopsies for diagnosis has provided the opportunity to study myocardial metabolism in patients with cardiac diseases. The authors have tested microassays of the hexose monophosphate shunt, glycolytic pathway, and Krebs cycle and demonstrated that they are easily and reproducibly performed on small pieces of cardiac tissue. They have also used these assays to study myocardial metabolism in 2 patients with endocarditis uncomplicated by congestive heart failure and in 2 patients with congestive heart failure due to idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy. The ability to quantitate myocardial metabolism in biopsies from patients with a variety of cardiac diseases may enhance our understanding of cardiac pathophysiology.
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PMID:Micromethods for determining activities of energy-producing and non-energy-producing pathways in myocardial tissue. 370 92

Rats inoculated with Streptococcus faecalis developed endocarditis and demonstrated a 6- to 30-fold increase in aldolase, isocitric dehydrogenase, phosphohexose isomerase, and lactic dehydrogenase. The animals infected with Bacillus subtilis did not develop overt disease nor significant increases in enzyme activities, but viable organisms were recovered at 2 weeks. Rats inoculated with mixed culture of these organisms showed a 2- to 10-fold increase of enzyme activities without evidence of pathological anatomic changes. Both organisms were recovered at necropsy. The total protein and glycoproteins followed the patterns of enzyme activities. There were major changes in alpha(1), alpha(2), and beta globulins and glycoglobuulins at the early stages of infection. The protein-bound hexose changes coincided with the severity of S. faecalis infection, but were at normal levels after 72 hr of infection of B. subtilis and S. faecalis mixed infections. The results indicate that B. subtilis infection modified the pathogenicity of S. faecalis and by an unknown mechanism affected protein and glycoprotein production in serum of experimental rats.
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PMID:Biochemical changes in serum of pure and mixed Streptococcus faecalis and Bacillus subtilis infections in rats. 418 98

A case of Candida albicans endocarditis is reported. The endocarditis occurred in a patient with a chronic illness who received intermittent glucose total intravenous nutrition for approximately 10 weeks. The patient developed severe aortic insufficiency with his valvular endocarditis and required emergency aortic valve replacement. Aggressive surgery and medical treatment appear to be the treatment of choice for these critically ill patients.
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PMID:Candida endocarditis complicating glucose total intravenous nutrition. 420 25

Chemiluminescence (CL) production by polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNLs) was examined in 63 patients with bacterial infections and 63 healthy controls. The production was significantly higher in the patients (mean +/- standard error = 134.5 +/- 5.0 X 10(3) cpm) than in the controls (118.9 +/- 2.5 X 10(3) cpm; p less than 0.05). In 38 patients CL values were within the normal range and in 19 patients above. CL production below that of any control occurred in 6 patients: 3 (of 4) with staphylococcal endocarditis, 2 (of 4) with pneumococcal meningitis and 1 with salmonella septicaemia and osteomyelitis. PMNL hexose monophosphate shunt activity as measured by glucose metabolism correlated with CL production. Patients with low CL production more often had large numbers of juvenile and immature myeloid cells in the peripheral blood than patients with normal or high CL values. 3/6 patients with low CL values died, 2/38 with normal and 0/19 with high values. Directed and spontaneous PMNL migration was examined in 39 of the 63 patients with bacterial infections. 13 patients had PMNLs with higher directed and 16 with higher spontaneous migration capacity than their corresponding controls. The remaining patients had PMNLs with lower migration capacity. 2 of the 39 patients died. Each had PMNLs with low migration capacity. CL production by PMNLs was examined in 16 patients with viral infections and 16 healthy controls. The production was significantly lower in the patients (mean +/- standard error = 105.5 +/- 6.6 X 10(3) cpm) than in the controls (129.1 +/- 5.3 X 10(3) cpm; p less than 0.01). 15 patients had lower values than their corresponding controls. The PMNL migration capacity was also lower in the patients. These findings indicate that the majority of patients with bacterial infections have PMNLs with normal or increased function. However, some patients have reduced PMNL function and this reduction may contribute to a fatal outcome of the disease. Patients with viral infections usually have reduced PMNL function.
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PMID:Polymorphonuclear leukocyte function in bacterial and viral infections. 707 22

On July 1994, a 62-year-old female, having a history of mitral regurgitation, was admitted because of high fever, hematuria and conjunctival petechiae. She was diagnosed as having infective endocarditis with mitral valve vegetation proved by ultrasonic cardiography. The gram negative rods were isolated from blood cultures performed five times, performed prior to the administration of antibiotics. The isolates were identified as strains of H. aphrophilus. After two days of treatment with PCG (12 million units/day), the organism became undetectable from the blood. Since the minimal inhibitory concentrations (MICs) of PCG and ABPC were ranged between 0.06-2.0 micrograms/ml and 0.06-0.5 microgram/ml, respectively, ABPC was selected as a first choice antibiotic instead of PCG. ABPC was given 12 g/day for the first 3 days, then 6 g/day for 28 days, followed by 3 g/day for 7 days. The patient recovered and was discharged after the 55 hospital days. H. aphrophilus grew on BTB lactose agar, chocolate agar and sheep blood agar, but failed to grow on MacConkey agar. H. aphrophilus produced smooth transparent nonhaemolytic micro colonies after 48 hours on sheep blood agar and chocolate agar plates. Atmosphere with 5% CO2 failed to enhance their growth. All the five strains of H. aphrophilus isolated, required neither factors V nor X. Positive synthesis of porphyrin from delta-aminolevlinic acid confirmed their ability to grow without X factor. For the correct identification of H. aphrophilus strains, fermentation test of glucose, lactose, maltose and sucrose in either phenol red broth or CTA medium are necessary.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Haemophilus aphrophilus isolated from the blood of a patient with infective endocarditis]. 756 Dec 48

From two human populations (one pediatric and one adult), clinically diagnosed with Staphylococcus epidermidis (S. epidermidis) sepsis of similar severity, bacteria were isolated from pre-antibiotic blood samples and evaluated for virulence. The LD50 of the bacteria in a mouse model was performed, with evaluation of animals dying acutely following intravenous S. epidermidis administration. More simple assays of virulence were also performed, including bacterial adherence to a fibrin clot and carbohydrate specific lectin binding. The eight pediatric-host S. epidermidis isolates required a significantly larger dose to produce lethality in dosed animals (LD50) when compared to the 20 adult-host S. epidermidis isolates. The fibrin clot assay, a test that has corroborated bacterial virulence in endocarditis models, did not differentiate the groups: all but one of the 28 isolates were well above the adherence seen with the ATCC control, suggesting endocarditis-producing potential. Glycocalyx (slime) from eight of the more virulent isolates showed reactivity with a glucose-specific biotinylated lectin which was lacking in other isolates. Necropsy of mice dying at 12 hr showed S. epidermidis strain differences in specific organ effects. Overall, this study demonstrates the utility of the LD50 to provide a highly sensitive quantification of bacterial virulence. Necropsy of test animals dying acutely has showed an apparent organ tropism of some of these isolates which are usually considered harmless commensals.
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PMID:Contribution of the host to test results in assays of Staphylococcus epidermidis. 771 67

We correlated quantity of streptococcal polysaccharides and endocarditis production by those bacterial strains. To investigate this finding further, we studied the composition of the glycocalyx using a spectrophotometric assay and lectin analysis of exopolysaccharides from endocarditis- and non-endocarditis-producing strains of viridans streptococci. Identical weights of glycocalyx from the clinical endocarditis isolates produced significantly different absorbances as compared with the nonendocarditis isolates (P < 0.0012, Wilcoxon rank test). Lectin-binding experiments showed that endocarditis-producing streptococci contained increased amounts of glucose, galactose, sialic acid, and mannose. These data suggest that the glycocalyx of endocarditis-producing viridans streptococci is both qualitatively and quantitatively different from non-endocarditis-producing isolates. These differences can be measured in vitro.
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PMID:Reactivity of the glycocalyx of endocarditis-producing viridans group streptococci. 811 39

The effects of growth conditions on the properties of the endocarditis-producing oral bacterium Streptococcus sanguis FSS2 were studied. This strain produces a variety of proteases and glycosidases, including a thrombin-like activity that is a potential virulence factor for endocarditis. Cultures were grown with limiting glucose or galactose in chemostats over a range of dilution rates and pH levels, and the following activities were measured at pH 7.5: thrombin-like, Hageman factor-like, N-acetyl-beta-D-galactosaminidase, beta-D-glucosidase, and beta-D-galactosidase. At growth pH 6.5, specific activities generally decreased as the dilution rate increased from 0.05 to 0.40 h(-1). At a dilution rate of 0.1 h(-1), specific activities generally were highest at growth pH 6.5 and lower and approximately equal at growth pH 5.5 and 7.5. The major exception was the thrombin-like activity, for which the specific activity at growth pH 7.5 was approximately 5-fold higher than at growth pH 5.5. Hageman factor-like activity was apparently glucose catabolite repressible, as its activity was 3-fold higher in galactose cultures. The measured activities changed as functions of growth conditions and thus were modulated by environment. Environmental regulation of thrombin-like activity by pH is consistent with an activity that is less important on tooth surfaces than in tissues.
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PMID:Modulation of glycosidase and protease activities by chemostat growth conditions in an endocarditis strain of Streptococcus sanguis. 860 41

The production of glycosidase and protease activities, which may play a role in the degradation of human glycoproteins, by Streptococcus oralis strains isolated from endocarditis, septicaemia or the oral cavity was investigated with a range of fluorogenic substrates. The pH optima of the proteases ranged from 6.0 to 9.3 and the pH optima for the glycosidases were lower (4.5-6.0), although the pH range over which both groups of enzymes acted was broad. Growth in a minimal medium supplemented with glucose resulted in repression of glycosidase activities and elevated proteolytic activity. Bacteria from cultures supplemented with porcine gastric mucin (PGM), a model glycoprotein, exhibited higher levels of glycosidase activity, while proteolytic activity was suppressed and glycoprotein-derived monosaccharides were transported at significantly higher rates than those observed for cells grown in media with glucose. PGM-derived cells also exhibited high levels of N-acetylneuraminate pyruvate-lyase, the first intracellular enzyme in the pathway of sialic acid catabolism. Taken together, these data indicate that S. oralis strains produce a range of proteolytic and glycosidic enzymes that may play a role in the degradation of host-derived glycoproteins.
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PMID:Effect of mucin and glucose on proteolytic and glycosidic activities of Streptococcus oralis. 863 57

Nine strains of Streptococcus oralis, isolated from blood cultures of patients with infective endocarditis or from the oral cavity as part of the normal flora, were examined for their ability to elaborate sialidase (neuraminidase) and N-acetylglucosaminidase, enzymes which are involved in the degradation of glycoproteins. Both glycosidases were induced when bacteria were grown in a minimal medium supplemented with porcine gastric mucin, a model glycoprotein, and repressed when growth occurred in the presence of glucose. Cell-free extracts mucin-grown cultures expressed elevated levels of N-acetylneuraminate pyruvate-lyase (the first intracellular enzyme in the pathway of N-acetylneuraminate catabolism), N-acetylglucosamine (glcNAc)-6-phosphate deacetylase and glucosamine-6-phosphate deaminase (enzymes involved in the intracellular catabolism of GlcNAc 6-phosphate); activity of each of these intracellular enzymes was markedly repressed when bacteria were grown in media supplemented with alpha 1-acid glycoprotein, a major component of human plasma. Cells from these cultures expressed high levels of sialidase, N-acetylglucosaminidase, and the intracellular enzymes involved in the catabolism of N-acetyl-sugars released by action of these glycosidases. High-resolution 1H-NMR spectroscopy of spent culture supernatants revealed that sialic acid and GlcNAc residues of the molecularly mobile oligosaccharide side-chains of alpha 1-acid glycoprotein had been hydrolysed and the released sugars internalized by the bacteria. These data indicate that S. oralis has the ability to hydrolyse constituents of oligosaccharide side-chains of host-derived glycoproteins and to utilize simultaneously these released carbohydrates. The biochemical characteristics induced by the growth of S. oralis on glycoproteins may play a role in the survival and persistence of these bacteria at the infection site in vivo.
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PMID:Metabolism of glycoprotein-derived sialic acid and N-acetylglucosamine by Streptococcus oralis. 870 62


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