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Query: UMLS:C0014118 (
endocarditis
)
15,629
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In the last years the number of HIV-positive patients needing cardiac surgery has greatly increased. Cardiopulmonary bypass is suspected to have a role in the progression of HIV-infection to acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). From October 1988 to December 1990, 6 intravenous drug addicts underwent cardiac surgery for infective
endocarditis
at our Department. Preoperative and postoperative absolute lymphocyte T-helper (
CD4
) and T-suppressor (CD8) counts did not show a close association between the temporary lymphopenia induced by cardiopulmonary bypass and progression to AIDS.
...
PMID:Cardiac surgery in HIV-positive intravenous drug addicts: influence of cardiopulmonary bypass on the progression to AIDS. 148 17
Cardiac abnormalities are frequently reported in patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). Much less is known about the true prevalence of cardiac involvement in patients with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. We prospectively examined 138 consecutive patients with HIV infection including 41 with AIDS, 49 with AIDS-related complex (ARC), 32 with chronic lymphoadenopathy syndrome (LAS) and 16 with asymptomatic HIV infection. Sixty-one patients had opportunistic infection. The prevalence of cardiac involvement progressively increased from patients with HIV infections or LAS (4%) to ARC (14%) to AIDS (37%). "Major" echocardiographic abnormalities (dilated cardiomyopathy and/or infective
endocarditis
and/or severe pericardial effusion) were identified in 3 patients (2%), "minor" abnormalities (mild pericardial effusion, hypokinesis of the interventricular septum, mild dilatation of the left ventricle in 21 (15%). Electrocardiographic abnormalities unassociated with echo abnormalities or clinical problems were seen in other 11 patients. End diastolic left ventricular dimension (normalized for body surface area) was higher among AIDS respect to pre-AIDS patients (30.1 +/- 7.1 vs 27.6 +/- 7.5; p less than 0.01) and among patients with respect to patients without opportunistic infections (29.5 +/- 6.5 vs 27.5 +/- 2.4; p less than 0.05). Left ventricular shortening fraction was lower in the subgroup with and absolute
CD4
lymphocyte count less than 100/mm3 (31 +/- 7 vs 34 +/- 5; p less than 0.055). In conclusion, in a large, unselected group of patients with HIV infection, echocardiogram discloses cardiac abnormalities in 17% of the cases; their clinical relevance is generally low but in selected patients cardiac tamponade and/or dilated cardiomyopathy (secondary to viral myocarditis) may cause death.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Cardiac involvement in HIV infection: a prospective, multicenter clinical and echocardiographic study]. 224 21
Capnocytophaga species are gram-negative rods which may cause disease in both non-immunocompromised and immunocompromised hosts. We describe a case of
endocarditis
due to Capnocytophaga ochracea in a non-immunocompromised patient with a decrease of blood
CD4
/CD8 ratio and lymphocyte proliferative response to ConA during infection. In vitro experiments showed that C. ochracea decreased lymphocyte proliferation to mitogens (ConA, PHA), cell surface CD4 antigen and IL2 receptor expression on peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from normal volunteers.
...
PMID:T lymphocyte disorder after Capnocytophaga ochracea endocarditis. 261 26
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected patients are at increased risk for serious and recurrent bacterial infections. We hypothesized that the degree of immunosuppression may play an important role in outcomes for HIV-seropositive patients with infective
endocarditis
(IE). To test our hypothesis, we retrospectively reviewed 144 cases of IE in injection drug users. One hundred two patients with documented HIV status (45 HIV-seropositive patients and 57 HIV-seronegative patients) were included in the analysis. Eleven patients (6 HIV-seropositive patients and 5 HIV-seronegative patients) died in the hospital. Staphylococcus aureus, the most common etiologic pathogen causing IE in our series, was isolated from 32 HIV-seropositive patients (71.1%) and 32 HIV-seronegative patients (56.1%). A clear inverse correlation between mortality rate and
CD4
cell count was demonstrated (r = -.625; P < .001). Both univariate and multivariate analyses supported the finding of significantly higher mortality rates among patients with
CD4
cell counts of < 200/mm3 than among patients with
CD4
cell counts of > 500/mm3 (OR, 14.7; 95% CI, 2.64-81.9).
...
PMID:Infective endocarditis in injection drug users: importance of human immunodeficiency virus serostatus and degree of immunosuppression. 882 64
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection and infective
endocarditis
are serious complications of injection drug use. To determine whether HIV infection may increase the risk of
endocarditis
beyond that associated with drug injection, we performed a nested case-control study among injecting drug users taking part in an ongoing cohort. We identified 26 participants with infective
endocarditis
between cohort enrollment (in 1988-1989) and June 1992, through reviews of medical records and death certificates. We matched each
endocarditis
case with up to five controls (N = 120) on enrollment date, race/ethnicity, and follow-up time. Data were taken from baseline and from the one follow-up visit: the last visit before the
endocarditis
occurred for cases and the closest visit (+/- 3 months) for controls. We used conditional logistic regression to quantify the association between HIV serostatus at follow-up and subsequent
endocarditis
, after adjusting for a history of
endocarditis
or sepsis before enrollment, injection duration, current injection frequency, and a recent history of abscess at injection sites. Among current injectors at follow-up, the adjusted odds ratio (OR) of developing
endocarditis
for HIV-seropositive subjects with > or = 350
CD4
cells per microliter, compared with HIV-seronegative subjects, was 2.31 [95% confidence interval (CI) = 0.61-8.78]; the corresponding OR for HIV-seropositive subjects with < 350
CD4
cells per microliter was 8.31 (95% CI = 1.23-56.37). These data indicate that HIV-related immunodeficiency may independently increase the risk of infective
endocarditis
among injecting drug users.
...
PMID:Human immunodeficiency virus infection and infective endocarditis among injecting drug users. 889 79
Several necropsy reports have suggested that cerebral vascular disease (CVD) is more frequent in HIV positive patients than in HIV negative individuals of the same age, although clinical signs are rare. We describe three patients for whom CVD was the clinical manifestation that led to diagnoses of HIV infection. The patients were two men and a woman aged 29, 52 and 66, respectively, with differing risk factors for CVD: smoking (3), blood hypertension (2),
endocarditis
(1) and free protein S deficiency (1). The risk factors for HIV infection were also different. The CVD diagnoses were confirmed by computed tomography, which revealed lacunar infarction in two cases with favorable outcomes and embolia-like infarction with subarachnoid hemorrhage in the third patient, who died a few days later.
CD4
levels varied (50, 130 and 689/mm3). Our observations lead us to the following conclusions: 1) CVD can be a first clinical manifestation of HIV infection and the disease that allows seropositivity to be diagnosed. Although CVD usually presents in advanced stages of HIV infection, it can also occur in seropositive patients who do not meet the criteria for AIDS. 2) The classical risk factors for vascular disease probably play a dominant role in the etiology of CVD in such patients, alongside systemic complications related to the virus; the direct role of HIV remains to be determined. 3) AIDS should be considered and ruled out in patients with CVD who are at risk for HIV infection, even in older patients with vascular risk factors.
...
PMID:[Cerebrovascular disease as a form of presentation of HIV infection]. 900 48
Bacteremia due to non-typhi Salmonella is frequent in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected patients; however, focal complications rarely have been reported. Ten of 38 HIV-infected patients (26.3%) with salmonellosis documented over a period of 9 years had focal suppurative complications; only 19 (3.9%) of 490 adults without HIV infection who were seen during the same period had focal complications (P = .001). Infections of the urinary tract, lungs, and soft tissue, followed by arthritis,
endocarditis
, and meningitis were most frequently seen. Although salmonellosis occasionally heralded HIV infection, most patients were severely immunocompromised and had
CD4
cell counts of <100/mm3. The mortality rate was 50%, equivalent to that observed among patients with other immunosuppressive disorders (52.6%). Major emphasis must be put on intensive therapy for salmonella bacteremia and prevention of its complications.
...
PMID:Focal infections due to non-typhi Salmonella in patients with AIDS: report of 10 cases and review. 931 63
Cardiac involvement with HIV infection has been documented worldwide in various forms among people with AIDS, including myocarditis, cardiomyopathies, pericardial effusions, ventricular tachycardia, neoplastic infiltration, and non-bacterial thrombotic
endocarditis
. Recent studies in Africa have reported that HIV may exhibit a cardiac tropism. The authors investigated whether clinical features, sex, age at onset, biological or echocardiographic variables influence the survival of African HIV-infected patients and the progression of AIDS. 157 consecutive Black African HIV-seropositive patients of mean age 38 years with neither cardiac lesions nor other AIDS-defining illnesses underwent physical, electrocardiographic, and Doppler echocardiographic examinations at the Heart of Africa Cardiovascular Center, Lomo Medical, Kinshasa, Congo, between July 1987 and July 1994. The sample was comprised of 89 men and 68 women. Cardiac lesions occurred in 87 patients (55%) during the 7-year follow-up. The onset of heart involvement was associated with a protection against opportunistic comorbidity. In the multiple regression model, cardiac mass/volume ratio, body temperature, deceleration time, body mass index, and socioeconomic status were each independently associated with AIDS outcome. The lowest socioeconomic status and pericardial effusion were the independent predictors of death in a multivariate analysis, while higher
CD4
count and cardiac lesions outcome were associated with slower progression to AIDS. Dilated cardiomyopathy was associated with longer survival.
...
PMID:Heart involvement and HIV infection in African patients: determinants of survival. 957 18
The intent of this study was to determine if HIV seropositivity alters the maximum temperature (T(max)) and WBC count of febrile intravenous (i.v.) drug users with infective
endocarditis
(IE). A review of 497 charts of patients with
endocarditis
provided 228 eligible patient visits (46%), with 158 cases (69.3%) of IE among 126 patients (74 HIV+ and 52 HIV-). Mean T(max) for all patients with IE was 39.1 degrees C (102.4 degrees F). Mean T(max) was similar between the HIV+ (39.1 degrees C, 102.4 degrees F) and HIV- (39.2 degrees C, 102.5 degrees F) groups. There were no differences in mean T(max) among HIV+ patients with
CD4
counts > 200 (39.0 degrees C, 102.3 degrees F), those with
CD4
< or =200 (39.2 degrees C, 102.5 degrees F), and the HIV- group (39.2 degrees C, 102.5 degrees F). Nearly 8% of i.v. drug users with confirmed IE presented to the ED with a T(max) below 37.8 degrees C (100.0 degrees F). Mean WBC count was significantly lower in HIV+ (11.1 k/mm(3)) than in HIV- patients (15.4 k/mm(3)) and significantly lower in the group with
CD4
< or =200 (8.0 k/mm(3)) than in the HIV- group. In conclusion, HIV infection was not associated with lower T(max), but it was associated with decreased WBC count in the general HIV+ group and in the group with
CD4
< or =200.
...
PMID:Infective endocarditis in intravenous drug users: does HIV status alter the presenting temperature and white blood cell count? 1086 11
Until recently, it was presumed that Bartonella vinsonii only infected voles, a species of North American rodents. In April of 1993, however, our laboratory isolated a novel subspecies of B. vinsonii (B. vinsonii subsp. berkhoffii) from the blood of a dog diagnosed with vegetative valvular
endocarditis
. Subsequently, based on a seroepidemiologic survey of dogs from North Carolina and Virginia presenting for a variety of medical problems, we found evidence supporting a potentially important association between B. vinsonii and Ehrlichia canis co-infection in dogs. In the following study, eight dogs were infected with B. vinsonii: four specific pathogen free dogs and four dogs that had previously been infected with E. canis. Flow cytometric analysis of peripheral blood lymphocytes revealed a cyclic elevation of the
CD4
/CD8 T-cell ratio that correlated with cyclic CD8+ lymphopenia in all dogs infected with B. vinsonii, regardless of prior exposure to E. canis.
...
PMID:Cyclic CD8+ lymphopenia in dogs experimentally infected with Bartonella vinsonii subsp. berkhoffii. 1088 98
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