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Query: UMLS:C0014118 (
endocarditis
)
15,629
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The effectiveness of a
water
-soluble C-12 alkyl sulfate (T6) (U.S. Patent No. 4,323,358) in retarding bioprosthetic calcification was evaluated in 23 porcine-valved conduits (13 T6-treated conduits and 10 controls) implanted in young sheep between the right ventricle and the pulmonary trunk. The grafts were divided into three groups according to the period of function: Group I, less than 2 months; Group II, 2 to 4 months; and Group III, 5 to 7 months. In Group I (four T6 and four controls),
endocarditis
occurred in five cases. In Group II (three T6 and three controls), four conduits showed severe fibrous peel ingrowth. In Group III (six T6 and three controls), fibrous peel was the main feature in four conduits and calcium deposits occurred in the porcine aortic wall in all cases, with cusp involvement in two; in both T6-treated and control conduits, chemical analysis showed a much lower calcium content of the cusps (8.45 +/- 80 versus 2.95 +/- 1.52 mg/gm dry weight, respectively) than that reported in other animal or human explants. The grade of calcification in control and T6-treated conduits was equal on x-ray analysis, and no differences in calcification patterns were noted on electron microscopy. This experimental model shows a low degree of cusp calcification and no significant differences between T6-treated and control conduits. Peel formation markedly interferes with performance of the porcine-valved conduit. The results of this analysis indicate that valved conduits are not the optimum model for evaluating calcium-retardant agents in biological valves.
...
PMID:Experimental evaluation of porcine-valved conduits processed with a calcium-retarding agent (T6). 394 89
Pseudomonas alcaligenes is a common soil and
water
inhabitant that has rarely been proven a human pathogen. We describe a fatal case of Pseudomonas alcaligenes
endocarditis
. The need for accurate identification of unusual organisms isolated in a clinical setting are discussed.
...
PMID:Pseudomonas alcaligenes endocarditis. 682 10
Aminoglycosides are potent
water
-soluble antibiotics, with peak concentration-dependent bactericidal activity against many pathogenic aerobic Gram-negative bacilli and Staphylococcus aureus. For systemic therapy, they must be given parenterally (intravenously or intramuscularly). In the body they remain largely extracellular, but penetration into cerebrospinal fluid and other secretions is meagre. They display trough concentration-dependent reversible nephrotoxicity and The commonly irreversible ototoxicity, which may present after treatment ceases. Gentamicin is the usual all-purpose agent of choice, tobramycin is slightly more effective against Pseudomonas aeruginosa infections, amikacin is the least susceptible to degradation by bacterial enzymes and netilmicin is probably the least toxic. Clinical and drug concentration monitoring have a role in therapy. Aminoglycosides exhibit enduring antibacterial activity (especially against Gram-negative bacilli) many hours after tissue concentrations become negligible. Appreciation of this postantibiotic effect is leading to replacement of conventional multiple daily doses by large single daily doses. The latter regimens confer at least equivalent efficacy and less risk of toxicity (particularly renal). However, single daily dosage may be unsuitable for immunocompromised patients and in those with infective
endocarditis
, where there is insufficient experience. Cotreatment with beta-lactams is commonly used in order to exploit the synergism between these agents, particularly in enterococcal
endocarditis
and severe Gram-negative sepsis. Liposomal aminoglycosides are promising parenteral formulations. After being taken up by phagocytes they reach the liver, spleen and sites of inflammation; subsequently they are gradually released. To substantiate the applicability of these hitherto experimental formulations, findings from clinical studies are keenly awaited.
...
PMID:Parenteral aminoglycoside therapy. Selection, administration and monitoring. 752 30
Transesophageal echocardiography is an important diagnostic tool available to the critical care physician. Indications for the use of transesophageal echocardiography in the intensive care unite include: critical illness and circulatory shock, thoracic aortic dissection, pulmonary embolism and
endocarditis
. Probe insertion is easy and is successful in 98% of intensive care patients. Further information concerning 44% of the patients was obtained with transesophageal as compared to transthoracic echocardiography. Transesophageal echocardiography is particularly helpful in evaluating cardiac size and function in patients with circulatory shock. When these patients are on multiple positive inotropic and vasopressor drugs, transesophageal echocardiography is useful in assessing left ventricular preload. In these patients, hemodynamic estimation of left ventricular filling may be misleading. More difficult is the assessment of hemodynamic events in patients requiring mechanical ventilation with increasing positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP). This ventilation mode develops its own pathophysiology which superposes the effects of the underlying disease. Transesophageal examination of the heart after application of PEEP up to 16 cm
H2O
demonstrated an acute decrease in size of the right and left ventricle (Figure 1). Cardiac index was affected by the decrease in right ventricular dimension by external compression. The addition of positive and expiratory pressure to a level of 8 cm
H2O
did not depress cardiac index in patients with severe left ventricular dysfunction. PEEP ventilation is associated with abnormal filling patterns characterized by a significant reduction in peak early filling velocity, acceleration and deceleration rate of early filling and peak early to atrial filling velocity ratio (Figures 2a and 2b). Stoddard et al. showed, that these findings of transmitral Doppler flow indices are associated with abnormal left ventricular relaxation. Analysis of regional wall motion under different PEEP levels demonstrated a distinct transmission of increased intrathoracic pressure on the left ventricular wall. We found significant changes in systolic wall motion, in particular a decrease in systolic shortening of the septum and an increase of the lateral wall. Thus, increased intrathoracic pressure under PEEP ventilation is associated with nonuniform regional changes in systolic contraction and abnormal left ventricular relaxation. Both factors are responsible for the decrease in cardiac index under PEEP ventilation. Right ventricular infarction: The transgastric view is usefull in detecting right ventricular wall motion abnormalities and dilatation. Hemodynamically significant right ventricular infarction occurs in the posterior wall, which makes the transesophageal approach ideal. We studied a group of 39 patients with right ventricular infarction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Transesophageal echocardiography on the intensive care unit]. 830 52
Surgical patients appear to be at highest risk for acquisition of nosocomial Legionella pneumonia; most appear to become infected during respiratory tract manipulation and mechanical ventilation. Although the lungs are the most common site of nosocomial Legionella infection, an important subset of patients have infection at extrapulmonary sites. We describe 22 cases of extrapulmonary legionellosis reported in the literature. Most of these patients were surgical patients; more than half did not have serious underlying illnesses, and only five (23%) were receiving immunosuppressive agents. A total of 13 extrapulmonary sites of infection were reported, many in the absence of clinical pneumonia; these infections included sinusitis, hip wound infection, and prosthetic valve
endocarditis
. Five patients (23%) had fatal infections; in four of these cases diagnosis of Legionella infection was made after death, underscoring the need for a high index of clinical suspicion. A large percentage of extrapulmonary Legionella infections may result from direct topical exposure of susceptible tissue to contaminated tap
water
. Use of tap
water
must be carefully monitored, particularly in dressing changes and bathing of surgical patients.
...
PMID:Nosocomial legionellosis: a review of pulmonary and extrapulmonary syndromes. 844 18
Acinetobacter calcoaceticus, a gram-negative bacterium ubiquitous in soil,
water
and sewage, is a rare cause of
endocarditis
in children. The first case of Acinetobacter
endocarditis
in an infant is described. This patient had underlying tetralogy of Fallot with absent pulmonary valve. A review of the literature in English revealed only four other cases of Acinetobacter
endocarditis
in children; three of whom had underlying congenital heart disease. Like the other reported cases, this patient responded well to antibiotic treatment. Subsequently this patient underwent corrective cardiac surgery but died of post-operative complications.
...
PMID:Acinetobacter endocarditis in children: a case report and review of the literature. 855 92
Aggregation substance (AS) of Enterococcus faecalis which is encoded by so-called sex pheromone plasmids enables the bacteria to bind to in vitro-cultured pig kidney tubular cells. It is reported that the presence of AS is not of pivotal importance for the ability of E. faecalis to cause infective
endocarditis
(EN). The lines of evidence for this are twofold: 1) sex pheromone plasmids and, therefore, the gene for AS were not present more often in epidemiologically unrelated strains of E. faecalis isolated from human cases of EN than in isolates from well-
water
(26 vs. 18%); 2) the presence of the adhesin did not correlate with the establishment of EN in an animal (rat) model. The data are discussed with respect to the specificity of interaction of AS with eukaryotic cells and the results of other studies.
...
PMID:Does aggregation substance of Enterococcus faecalis contribute to development of endocarditis? 950 82
This study sought to test whether anomalous cardiac and aortic structures can be differentiated from native tissue and artifacts by physical properties of tissue motion using transesophageal tissue Doppler echocardiography (TDE). TDE was employed in 85 consecutive patients after anomalous structures had been detected by conventional transesophageal echocardiography (TEE). The control group consisted of 40 randomized patients. Certainty of diagnosis was divided into 4 categories, and TDE signals were related to particular anomalous structures by a blinded second observer. A mechanical model of a beating ventricle was constructed and suspended in a
water
bath. Synthetic material was utilized to simulate anomalous intracavitary structures with varying shape, consistency, and attachment. Incoherent motion was present in endocarditic vegetations, freely oscillating thrombi, fourth-degree aortic plaques, Chiari network, valvular prolapse, tumors, and in normal valve leaflets and papillary muscles. Within 15 seconds vegetations could be detected in 17 patients (68%) using TDE versus 5 patients (20%) using only conventional imaging. Coherent motion with a phase difference occurred due to damped oscillation. This phenomenon occurred in 5 patients with thrombi of the left atrial appendage (100%), in 3 ventricular clots (75%), and in 2 hypernephroma in the right atrium (100%). Rapid identification of clots could be achieved in 15 patients (71%) versus 12 patients (57%). Concordant motion was shown in third-degree aortic plaques, postrheumatic valvular lesions, and aortic intramural hematomas, but diagnostic benefit could not be demonstrated. In 41 patients (48%) histopathologic and intraoperative results confirmed echocardiographic findings. Motion patterns could be reproduced independently of the heart rate by model experiments. This study demonstrates that TDE expedites the detection of vegetations in infective
endocarditis
. Diagnostic certainty can be increased as well for thrombus formations.
...
PMID:Usefulness of motion patterns indentified by tissue Doppler echocardiography for diagnosing various cardiac masses, particularly valvular vegetations. 1060 17
Streptogramin antibiotics represent a unique class of antibacterials in the each member of the class consists of at least 2 structurally unrelated molecules: group a streptogramins (macrolactones) and group B streptogramins (cyclic hexadepsipeptides). Both group A and group B streptogramins inhibit protein synthesis at the ribosomal level, and they act synergistically against many isolates their combination generating bactericidal activities and reducing the possibility of emergencies of resistant strains. The mechanisms of acquired resistance to group B streptogramins remain unaffected by target modifications and active efflux. The pharmacokinetic parameters of group A and group B streptogramins in blood are quite similar. In addition, both the A and B group penetrate and accumulate in macrophages and in the bacterial gegetations of experimental
endocarditis
. Until recently, the complex and irregular composition of naturally occurring pristinamycin and virginiamycin, as well as the unavailability of soluble forms, have limited the clinical development of streptogramins. The synthesis of
water
soluble derivatives of pristinamycin IA and IIB has now allowed the development of injectable streptogramins with fixed compositions. This unique class of antibacterials will have a significant clinical impact in a world of increasing multidrug resistance affecting the Gram-positive cocci, especially staphylococci and pneumococci. The absence of cross-resistance to macrolides in many of these isolates and the rapid antibacterial killing against these species bright future for this class of antibiotics.
...
PMID:Streptogramins: a new class of antibiotics. 1079 11
Aeromonas Hydrophila is a gram-negative bacillus commonly found in soil, sewage, and fresh or brackish
water
in many parts of the United States. In healthy people, the most common clinical manifestations attributed to Aeromonas are diarrhea and soft tissue infections. In people with suppressed immune systems or liver disease, A hydrophila can cause meningitis,
endocarditis
, peritonitis, hemolytic-uremic syndrome, or septicemia. We present the first known case of fulminant necrotizing fasciitis from A hydrophila that is not associated with trauma, liver disease, or immunosuppression.
...
PMID:Necrotizing fasciitis caused by Aeromonas hydrophila. 1090 69
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