Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0014118 (
endocarditis
)
15,629
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 64-year-old man, who underwent double valve replacement for mitral and aortic incompetence due to infective
endocarditis
, presented with a coronary embolism of a fragment of mitral papillary muscle in the immediate post-operative period. The diagnosis, suggested by the sudden development of acute myocardial insufficiency during ventricular filling, was confirmed by the absence of clinical or electrical improvement during circulatory assistance and by surgical exploration of the left coronary artery. Complete recovery after embolectomy emphasises the value of the association of circulatory assistance and immediate myocardial revascularisation.
Arch Mal Coeur Vaiss 1979
Sep
PMID:[Embolism in a fragment of the mitral papillary muscle to the left main coronary artery. A rare complication of valve replacement]. 11 14
This report documents the clinicopathologic correlation between pure aortic regurgitation and an exceptional form of congenitally bicuspid aortic valve. The patient was known for many years to have mild aortic insufficiency. His condition suddenly deteriorated, with signs of an aggravated aortic regurgitation. Infectious
endocarditis
was considered, but the diagnosis was never established. Surgery revealed an exceptional form of a bicuspid aortic valve in which the conjoined cusp had prolapsed, due to rupture of a fibrous strand which previously had anchored the free rim of the cusp to the inner wall of the aorta. There were no signs of infectious endocarditis. It is suggested that spontaneous rupture of the cord caused the sudden aggravation of aortic regurgitation.
Chest 1977
Sep
PMID:Spontaneous rupture of bicuspid aortic valve. An unusual cause of aortic insufficiency. 14 17
Fifteen patients with bacterial endocarditis were treated with vancomycin between 1967 and 1976. The indications for vancomycin therapy were penicillin-cephalosporin allergy in six patients, antibiotic resistant bacteria in six, initial therapy in one and culture-negative
endocarditis
in two. The causative microorganisms were Staph. epidermidis (four patients), Staph. aureus (two patients), diphtheroids (four patients), viridans streptococci (two patients) and enterococci (one patient). Minimum inhibitory concentrations of vancomycin for these organisms ranged from 0.8 to 3.1 micrograms/ml. The patients received vancomycin for two to 10 weeks (mean five weeks). Cure was achieved in 13 patients, including six with prosthetic valve
endocarditis
(PVE). Two patients had a relapse of PVE and cultures of blood or heart valve were positive within two months of vancomycin therapy. Vancomycin serum levels did not exceed 50 micrograms/ml, and no serious drug toxicity was encountered in any patient. Three patients had minimal audiogram changes beyond the social hearing range. One patient had mild phlebitis and a rash, and one patient had a transient leukopenia. Vancomycin is an effective nontoxic antibiotic in patients with
endocarditis
when penicillin or cephalosporin therapy is not appropriate.
Am J Med 1978
Sep
PMID:Vancomycin therapy of bacterial endocarditis. 15 80
The efficacy of nafcillin and gentamicin used alone and in combination at doses giving serum concentrations comparable to those achieved in patients was studied in rabbits with experimental Staphylococcus aureus endocarditis. The organism used was a penicillinase-producing, methicillin-susceptible, clinical isolate. The addition of gentamicin to nafcillin significantly increased the rate of killing of organisms in valvular vegetations, compared to the effect of nafcillin alone. Gentamicin alone delayed mortality but was not effective in reducing the bacterial populations of the vegetations. Bacteremia persisted in the animals treated with gentamicin alone, in contrast to the groups treated with nafcillin or the combination. Selection of a subpopulation of aminoglycoside-resistant small-colony variants occurred in animals treated with gentamicin alone. This variant was subsequently employed in the rabbit model and produced
endocarditis
, metastatic infection, and bacteremia comparable to those caused by the parent strain. Animals with infection produced by the variant died later than animals infected by the parent strain. Nafcillin was equally effective in reducing the population of both parent and variant strains in vitro and in therapy of the infected animals. Population studies showed the variant to be a mutant emerging at a rate of 1.9 x 10(-7). It was shown to differ from the parent strain in coagulase and hemolysin production, colonial morphology, and aminoglycoside susceptibility, but was similar by light and electron microscopy and in phage type, pigmentation of colonies, deoxyribonuclease production, mannitol fermentation, and growth rate.
Antimicrob Agents Chemother 1978
Sep
PMID:Single and combination antibiotic therapy of Staphylococcus aureus experimental endocarditis: emergence of gentamicin-resistant mutants. 25 Oct 69
Staphylococcus epidermidis is a major pathogen in early prosthetic valve
endocarditis
and cerebrospinal fluid shunt infections. Approximately 10 to 15% of hospital isolates are methicillin resistant. Ten clinically significant isolates of the latter were collected for antibiotic studies in vitro and in an experimental infection in animals. Time-kill studies of five strains showed gentamicin to be the single most effective antibiotic; however, dwarf colony variants emerged as survivors with two of these strains when challenged with gentamicin alone. The addition of a second antibiotic to gentamicin did not significantly improve the bactericidal rate but prevented the emergence of variant strains. A blood culture isolate of methicillin-resistant S. epidermidis combined with 5% hog gastric mucin was used to establish an experimental intraperitoneal infection in mice. Neither methicillin nor nafcillin treatment reduced mortality below that of untreated animals. Cephalothin treatment delayed early mortality but did not diminish overall mortality. Gentamicin was the most effective single antibiotic, and gentamicin in combination with vancomycin was the most effective regimen overall. The combination of rifampin plus vancomycin was as effective as gentamicin alone. The combinations of cephalothin or nafcillin with gentamicin and cephalothin with vancomycin demonstrated antagonism. The antagonism was not due to multiple injections or drug-drug inactivation.
Antimicrob Agents Chemother 1979
Sep
PMID:Antibiotic activity in vitro against methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus epidermidis and therapy of an experimental infection. 25 21
Rarely is
endocarditis
attributed to the species of Hemophilus. Most frequently implicated are H aphrophilus and H parainfluenzae, but H influenzae also is seen. We report six cases of
endocarditis
due to H aphrophilus or H parainfluenzae and review the literature. Emboli to skin, lungs, kidneys, spleen, brain, and other organs are common complications, and acute glomerulonephritis and meningitis often occur. Ampicillin is the mainstay of antimicrobial therapy for patients whose isolates are sensitive to it, but the duration of antimicrobial therapy necessary for eradication of the infection is not clear. Studies of antimicrobial synergism are warranted in instances of
endocarditis
caused by ampicilin- or penicillin-resistant strains of Hemophilus, or when patients are allergic to penicillin; in these instances, combination antimicrobial therapy must be given when bactericidal synergism can be demonstrated. Intensive management of complications caused by embolization is crucial to patient survival.
South Med J 1977
Sep
PMID:Hemophilus endocarditis: new cases, literature review and recommendations for management. 30 87
Trichosporon is a frequent cause of superficial mycotic infections but has rarely been associated with invasive disease. A patient undergoing bone marrow transplantation who died from disseminated Trichosporon capitatum infection with
endocarditis
is reported, and the clinical spectrum of human infection caused by fungi of this genus is reviewed. To our knowledge, this is the first reported case of clearly invasive disease caused by this specific organism and emphasizes the expanding spectrum of unusual infections in the severely immunosuppressed patient.
Arch Intern Med 1977
Sep
PMID:Disseminated Trichosporon capitatum infection in an immunosuppressed host. 33 1
The prevention of Candida
endocarditis
in the rabbit was easily accomplished with a single intramuscular injection of 75 mg of 5-FC (A predominantly fungistatic agent) per kg either 40 min before, or at the same time as, the intravenous challenge with Candida albicans. Renal infarcts were observed more often in rabbits with infected valvular vegetations than in control rabbits with sterile
endocarditis
. The prophylactic effect of 5-FC is greater in aortic vegetations than in the kidneys. This may be related to differences in the pathophysiology of infection and the pharmacokinetics of 5-FC in the two areas.
Antimicrob Agents Chemother 1979
Sep
PMID:Experimental endocarditis: prophylaxis of Candida albicans infections by 5-fluorocytosine in rabbits. 38 56
A case of
endocarditis
caused by Salmonella enteritidis is reported in a 20-year-old African woman. This is only the fourth published case. The development of this rare infection in the patient reported here probably resulted from a reduction in immunity caused by pregnancy and a past splenectomy.
Br Heart J 1979
Sep
PMID:Endocarditis caused by Salmonella enteritidis. 38 58
Between March 1970 and May 1976, 564 patients have undergone single or multiple heart valve replacement with the Hancock "SGP" bioprosthesis in our institution. Of these patients, 335 had single mitral, 102 aortic, one tricuspid, and 126 double or triple valve replacement, for a total of 629 xenografts. The long-term results, in terms of clinical improvement, survival, and complications, have been analyzed. Significant valve insufficiency secondary to primitive tissue alterations occurred in three patients, while reoperations were required in two for
endocarditis
and in two others for mitral stenosis caused by tissue ingrowth. We found that thromboembolic episodes occurred mainly in the early postoperative period up to the third month in 10 cases (1.76%). Three patients suffered peripheral embolization during the late follow-up period. Anticoagulants were not administered beyond 3 months postoperatively. Hemodynamic re-evaluation has been performed in 42 patients and the prosthesis has been shown to function properly either in the mitral or the aortic position. The data available to date indicate that the glutaraldehyde-preserved porcine valve is durable and we feel that its use is warranted in any valvular position.
Circulation 1977
Sep
PMID:Heart valve replacement with the Hancock bioprosthesis. Analysis of long-term results. 40 32
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>