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Query: UMLS:C0014118 (
endocarditis
)
15,629
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Two-hundred and eighty-one patients underwent surgical treatment of the aortic valves during a 10-year period of 1981 to 1991, 32 of whom (11%) had bicuspid aortic valve. Bicuspid aortic valve is well known to cause calcified aortic stenosis, however, some of these cases develop pure aortic insufficiency of unknown etiology. In our studies of 32 patients with bicuspid aortic valve, 28 patients had aortic stenosis, 2 were aortic insufficiency and 2 were infective
endocarditis
. Pathogenesis of aortic insufficiency in patients with bicuspid aortic valves was discussed and compared with that of aortic stenosis.
J
Cardiol
Suppl 1992
PMID:[Congenital bicuspid aortic valve: stenotic type and insufficient type]. 141 72
Aortic valve
endocarditis
with extension to the tricuspid annulus and ventricular septum in an intravenous drug abuser - with Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare identified as the offending organism - forms the basis of this report. The aortic root and ventricular septal defect were successfully repaired using an aortic cryopreserved homograft. This case is of particular interest because M avium-intracellulare has not been recognized as a cause of
endocarditis
. The incidence of atypical organisms as a cause of
endocarditis
may increase in the future because of the rise of drug abuse and the acquired immune deficiency syndrome in North America.
Can J
Cardiol
1992 Sep
PMID:Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare endocarditis causing rupture: replacement and repair with aortic homograft. 850 28
A case of Staphylococcus aureus tricuspid valve
endocarditis
in a patient with permanent transvenous VVI pacemaker and recurrent febrile episodes is described. Medical treatment was not effective, and only with surgical removal of the lead was the infection successfully treated.
G Ital
Cardiol
1992 May
PMID:[Sepsis and endocarditis: two rare complications following pacemaker implantation. Description of a case and review of the literature]. 142 95
A consecutive series of 1288 mitral valves surgically excised from 1981 through 1989 were studied macroscopically and histologically. The explanted valves were affected by: chronic rheumatic disease (1179, 91.5%), floppy mitral valve (84, 6.5%), bacterial endocarditis (19, 1.5%), and post-ischemic mitral incompetence (6, 0.5%). Among 1179 post-rheumatic cases, mixed mitral stenosis and incompetence was the most frequent malfunction (747, 58%). Isolated mitral incompetence was diagnosed in 72 (6.11%) cases only, and isolated stenosis in 360 cases. In 52 valves, excised because of chronic rheumatic disease, the histology showed unexpected signs of acute rheumatism of the leaflets and the papillary muscles. In these patients clinical symptoms and blood tests were negative for rheumatic disease. Mitral incompetence, possibly due to papillary muscle dysfunction, was the prevalent lesion (61.5%). A total of 181 patients (14.05%) with pure mitral incompetence underwent surgery. In 84 patients (46.4%), the floppy mitral valve was the most frequent cause of valve dysfunction, 72 (39.8%) had rheumatic disease, 19 (10.5%) infective
endocarditis
, and 6 (3.4%) ischemic heart disease. In the group with floppy mitral valve, males were more prevalent than females (51:33). The mean age of the 4 patients with Marfan's syndrome and non-Marfan patients was noticeably different (17 vs 49 yr). Moreover leaflet deformation, tendinous cord elongation and annulus dilatation were the most common causes of valve incompetence. Floppy mitral valve and infective
endocarditis
were the cause of cordal rupture in 43.5% of the cases. This was a severe complication which always required emergency surgery.
Int J
Cardiol
1992 Oct
PMID:Surgical pathology of the mitral valve: gross and histological study of 1288 surgically excised valves. 142 93
A case of Listeria monocytogenes
endocarditis
in a patient with mitral prosthetic valve, left atrial thrombus and colonic adenocarcinoma is reported. Vegetations were not demonstrated by transesophageal echocardiography and the clinical course was benign and without complications. Cure was achieved with antibiotic therapy, and surgery was not required. These features suggest that atrial thrombus could be the source of infection.
Rev Esp
Cardiol
PMID:[Listeria monocytogenes endocarditis in a patient with mitral prosthesis, left auricular thrombus and adenocarcinoma of the colon]. 143 74
The epidemiology, clinical features, microbiology and outcome of 30 episodes of nosocomial
endocarditis
occurring over a 13-year period were reviewed and compared with 148 cases of community-acquired
endocarditis
. Twenty-eight patients (93%) had been in hospital for > 1 week and 10 patients (33%) for > 1 month when they developed
endocarditis
. Left-sided infection was most frequent; only 3 cases involved the tricuspid valve. Compared with community-acquired infection, patients tended to be older, had a greater incidence of congestive cardiac failure (p = 0.001) or hypotension (p = 0.0008) at presentation and were more likely to have bacteremia after an invasive procedure (83 vs 31%; p < 0.00001). Intravascular devices were the presumed source of bacteremia in 11 cases (37%); the same organism was isolated from both the blood and the suspected source of infection. Staphylococcus aureus was the most frequent causative organism, accounting for 17 episodes (57%), including 4 (13%) due to methicillin-resistant strains. Nosocomial
endocarditis
had a significantly higher mortality than did community-acquired infection (40 vs 18%; p = 0.02). Eight patients (27%) needed valve replacement. Proper adherence to protocols for management of intravascular devices and appropriate antimicrobial prophylaxis before procedures may have prevented
endocarditis
in 15 of 30 patients.
Am J
Cardiol
1992 Dec 01
PMID:A comparison of hospital and community-acquired infective endocarditis. 144 17
Clinical data from 186 patients (133 males and 53 females) with 190 episodes of infective
endocarditis
(IE) occurring between January 1981 and July 1991 were studied retrospectively at a large referral hospital in Northern India with the intention of highlighting certain essential differences from those reported in the West. The mean age was much lower (25 +/- SD 12 years, range 2 to 75 years). Rheumatic heart disease was the most frequent underlying heart lesion accounting for 79 patients (42%). This was followed by congenital heart disease in 62 (33%) and normal valve
endocarditis
in 17 (9%). Twenty-four patients had either aortic regurgitation (n = 15) or mitral regurgitation (n = 9) of uncertain etiology. Prosthetic valve infection and mitral valve prolapse were present in only 2 patients each. A definite predisposing factor could be identified in only 28 patients (15%). Postabortal sepsis and sepsis related to childbirth accounted for 6 and 5 cases, respectively. Only 1 patient had history of intravenous drug abuse. Two-dimensional echocardiography showed vegetations in 121 patients (64%). Blood cultures were positive in only 87 (47%), with a total of 90 microbial isolates. Commonest infecting organisms were staphylococci (37 cases) and streptococci (34 cases). Except for a significantly higher number of patients with neurologic complications in the culture-negative group, there were no differences between patients with culture-positive and culture-negative IE. Of the 190 episodes of IE, the patients had received antibiotics before admission in 110 (58%) instances. A significantly greater number of culture-negative patients had received antibiotics than did culture-positive patients (87 vs 23, p < 0.001).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Am J
Cardiol
1992 Dec 01
PMID:Active infective endocarditis observed in an Indian hospital 1981-1991. 144 18
To assess the usefulness and safety of transesophageal echocardiography in critically ill patients, we analysed the transesophageal echocardiography studies in 60 of such cases (age: 58 +/- 11 and 38 males). Every patient underwent a previous transthoracic echocardiogram, that was considered inadequate for diagnostic purposes. Thirty patients (50%), were on mechanical ventilation and 17 patients (28%) showed hypotension and/or shock. Forty patients (66%) were at special care units and in 31 (52%) of them, pulmonary and systemic pressures, and continuous analysis of venous pressure of oxygen were available. Indications for study were: 17 patients with clinical suspicion of aortic dissection (confirmed in 5 cases): 9 patients infective
endocarditis
(4 cases showed valvular vegetations); 6 patients with mitral prosthesis dysfunction (confirmed in 4 cases); complicated acute myocardial infarction (MI) in 8 patients (2 cases with mitral insufficiency, 3 with left ventricular dysfunction, 1 with right ventricular MI, 1 with left ventricular pseudoaneurysm and other with isolated inferior MI); in 11 patients the study was performed to evaluate the result of cardiac transplantation immediately (< 4 h) and it showed 2 cases of left ventricular dysfunction; 3 patients were studied for severe cardiac dysfunction of unknown etiology (a dilated cardiomyopathy was confirmed in one and ruled out in the other, and one patient showed signs of restrictive situation); there were other causes in the rest. The procedure could be completely performed in all cases. In conclusion in critically ill patients the transesophageal echocardiography has a great usefulness and minimal complications.
Rev Esp
Cardiol
1992 Oct
PMID:[Usefulness of transesophageal echocardiography in the critical patient]. 147 Jul 40
A 32-year old woman, with
endocarditis
caused by Streptococcus mitis, and systolic murmur is presented. The Doppler examination was found a systolic gradient of 150 mmHg. Aortography showed a multiple membranous supravalvular aortic stenosis, with aneurysmal dilatation of the left main coronary artery and circumflex artery, associated with bicuspid aortic valve and mild aortic insufficiency. The patient died suddenly by cardiac arrest in stand by to cardiac surgery. Anatomic comprobation was not possible. The coronary artery anomalies associated with the supravalvular aortic stenosis syndrome are reviewed.
Rev Esp
Cardiol
1992 Oct
PMID:[Supravalvular aortic stenosis and coronary aneurysm]. 147 Jul 47
We studied 882 cases of isolated ventricular septal defect (VSD) diagnosed from 1971 to 1988 with a mean follow-up period of 9.5 years. They represent 22.5% of all congenital heart defects diagnosed in this period. Six hundred eighty-three children (77.4%) did not develop symptoms, had small defects, and the rate of spontaneous closure was high (40.2%). The remaining 199 children presented symptoms; at the initial catheterization 25, 65, 107, and 2 cases were grouped in hemodynamic groups 2, 3, 4, and 5-6, respectively, on the basis of pulmonary flow and resistance. Only seven patients (0.7%) developed aortic regurgitation, and only five patients (0.5%) developed infective
endocarditis
. Complete surgical correction was performed in 137 children (15.5% of the total cases), with surgical mortality decreasing from 21.4% before 1983 to 3.5% afterward. Overall mortality was 3% for the entire cohort, 0% for hemodynamic groups 1 and 2, 3% for group 3, and 25% for hemodynamic groups 4-6. About two thirds of the deaths took place between 1 month and 1 year of life, and one thirds of the deaths occurred before surgical treatment. Surgical mortality rates for hemodynamic groups 2, 3, and 4 were 0, 4.7, and 15.3%, respectively. Actuarial survival curves show an important improvement in the prognosis after 1983. Our results stress the importance of early surgical complete correction on patients with large defects and severe hemodynamic changes.
Pediatr
Cardiol
1992 Oct
PMID:Natural and modified history of isolated ventricular septal defect: a 17-year study. 151 36
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