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Query: UMLS:C0014118 (
endocarditis
)
15,629
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
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
Prosthetic valve endocarditis is a formidable complication following cardiac valve replacement. Surgical intervention has resulted in a significant reduction in mortality when certain complications prevail. We report two such cases of prosthetic valve
endocarditis
in which the use of transesophageal echocardiography permitted close surveillance during medical therapy and thus avoided the need for surgical intervention. Therefore, with the improved ability to monitor disease progression with transesophageal echocardiography, nonsurgical management of prosthetic valve
endocarditis
remains an option.
Chest 1992
Dec
PMID:Utility of transesophageal echocardiography in the conservative management of prosthetic valve endocarditis. 144 10
Nonbacterial thrombotic endocarditis is an uncommon, but well-described, complication of bone marrow transplantation. We describe a case of nonbacterial thrombotic
endocarditis
following autologous bone marrow transplantation that was marked by weight gain, hepatomegaly, ascites, and extreme hyperbilirubinemia leading to a clinical diagnosis of hepatic veno-occlusive disease. Autopsy revealed nonbacterial thrombotic
endocarditis
of the tricuspid and pulmonic valves, and passive congestion of the liver, but there was no evidence of veno-occlusive disease. We discuss the pathophysiology and clinical features of nonbacterial thrombotic
endocarditis
and review its occurrence in association with bone marrow transplantation. Nonbacterial thrombotic endocarditis is often difficult to detect clinically and should be a diagnostic consideration in patients who develop systemic emboli or congestive heart failure after bone marrow transplantation.
Am J Clin Oncol 1992
Dec
PMID:Nonbacterial thrombotic endocarditis clinically mimicking veno-occlusive disease of the liver complicating autologous bone marrow transplantation. 144 13
A dental source of infection remains the most common identifiable risk factor in infective
endocarditis
and this may be particularly important in patients at 'high risk'. We therefore performed a questionnaire survey of dental practitioners to assess acceptance of The British Society of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy (BSAC) recommendations, especially with regards to selection of dental procedures for antibiotic prophylaxis. The results showed that the dental practitioners surveyed treated the 'high risk' patient group differently by extending the range of dental procedures covered by antibiotics but the BSAC only recommend that they be treated differently by hospital treatment and/or parenteral antibiotics. This must be an area of concern and deserves further attention, especially with regards to the need for wider publicity and the range of dental procedures that should be covered in the 'high risk' group where morbidity and mortality from infective
endocarditis
are higher.
J Dent 1992
Dec
PMID:Selection of dental procedures for antibiotic prophylaxis against infective endocarditis. 145 80
From February 1975 to August 1981, 23 consecutive patients underwent tricuspid valve replacement, which was either isolated (six patients) or combined with the replacement of other valves (17) by means of a standard, glutaraldehyde-preserved Hancock porcine bioprostheses. Patients' ages ranged from 9 to 53 (mean 36.2) years. The follow-up period ranged from 0.2 to 16.5 years (mean 9.1) and was complete in 100% of all cases. Structural valve failure of the tricuspid Hancock valve was noticed in two patients, a 9-year-old boy and a 13-year-old girl 3.4 and 16.5 years after implantation, respectively. The actuarial freedom rate from structural valve failure at 10 years was 94 +/- 6%. There were six tricuspid prosthesis-related events: structural valve failure in two and valve thrombosis, anticoagulant-related bleeding, prosthetic valve
endocarditis
, and periprosthetic leak in one each, respectively. The actuarial freedom from these events at 10 years was 78 +/- 10%. Five pairs of aortic/mitral-tricuspid Hancock valves were explanted simultaneously from the same patients after 8.1 to 13.9 (mean 11.4) years postoperatively. A gross examination showed no valve dysfunction in the explants from the tricuspid position, but degenerative changes with valve dysfunction in those from the mitral and aortic position were observed (none of five versus five of seven; p < 0.03). We concluded that the selection of a Hancock bioprosthesis in the tricuspid position is acceptable because of the low incidence of prosthesis-related complications and the excellent durability of more than 10 years.
J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 1992
Dec
PMID:Excellent durability of the Hancock porcine bioprosthesis in the tricuspid position. A sixteen-year follow-up study. 145 21
From November 1983 to April 1990, disseminated candidiasis was diagnosed in 83 heroin addicts at our institution. All patients had consumed brown heroin diluted in fresh lemon juice. Sixty-two (75%) had skin lesions, 41 (49%) had ocular lesions, and 35 (42%) had one or several costochondral tumors. Candida albicans was grown in culture or histopathologically identified in 34 cases (41%). The patients who had only cutaneous lesions were treated with ketoconazole, and they were all cured. The patients with ocular involvement received systemic amphotericin B with or without oral flucytosine; 29 of these patients developed varying degrees of vision loss. The method of treatment of costochondral tumors was not uniform; in 14 cases the lesions were resected. The one patient who died developed
endocarditis
involving the aortic valve. Cases of pleuropulmonary involvement, spondylitis, and large-joint arthritis have also been described among the 300 cases reported in the reviewed literature. This is a new syndrome of candidal infection in drug addicts who use brown heroin; ocular lesions are the most harmful manifestation, and loss of vision is the major sequela.
Clin Infect Dis 1992
Dec
PMID:Disseminated candidiasis in addicts who use brown heroin: report of 83 cases and review. 145 62
Fever persisting despite adequate antimicrobial therapy for
endocarditis
can be an ominous sign. To evaluate the significance of persistent fever in this situation, we reviewed the records of patients at three hospital affiliates of Albert Einstein College of Medicine. Twenty-six patients with 27 episodes of
endocarditis
and fever lasting for > or = 2 weeks despite appropriate antimicrobial therapy were identified and compared with a matched cohort of 26 patients with
endocarditis
but without prolonged fever. The median duration of fever in the former group was 35 days. Cardiac infection caused fever in 13 of these patients, seven of whom had myocardial abscesses. Additional causes of infection included drug treatment, nosocomial transmission of pathogens, and pulmonary emboli. Sixteen patients required cardiac surgery (seven on an emergent basis), whereas only two controls underwent such a procedure (P < .001). Twenty-two patients with persistent fever and five controls developed nosocomial complications (P < .001). Six patients with fever died, five from
endocarditis
-related complications. Thus persistent fever often indicates complicated
endocarditis
. We present an approach for the evaluation of the patients affected by this condition.
Clin Infect Dis 1992
Dec
PMID:Persistent fever in association with infective endocarditis. 145 71
The Duromedics (Baxter Healthcare Corp., Edwards CVS Div., Irvine, Calif.) mechanical cardiac valvular prosthesis was implanted in 480 patients between 1984 and 1987 at the Montreal Heart Institute, the Hospital Clinic of Barcelona and the teaching hospitals of the University of British Columbia. The mean age of the patients was 52 years. The early mortality was 7.9% and the late mortality was 4.1% per patient-year. The overall survival at 4 years for aortic valve replacement (AVR) was 87.0% +/- 3.7% and for mitral valve replacement (MVR) was 81.9% +/- 2.9%. There were 16 valve-related reoperations in 14 patients--for prosthetic valve
endocarditis
in 9 patients, for thromboembolism in 1 patient and for nonstructural dysfunction in 4 patients. The freedom from thromboembolism at 3 and 4 years was 94.3% +/- 3.1% for AVR and 95.1% +/- 1.8% for MVR. The freedom from prosthetic valve
endocarditis
at 3 and 4 years was 95.3% +/- 2.2% for AVR and 96.2% +/- 1.6% for MVR. The freedom from structural valve deterioration for all positions was 100%. The freedom from reoperation at 4 years was 95.3% +/- 2.1% for AVR and 92.3% +/- 4.3% for MVR and from valve-related death was 98.7% +/- 1.3% for AVR and 96.2% +/- 1.6% for MVR. The freedom from all valve-related complications at 4 years was 87.7% +/- 3.8% for AVR and 85.7% +/- 2.9% for MVR. Long-term evaluation of the Duromedics prosthesis is required to determine the influence of documented structural valve deterioration.
Can J Surg 1992
Dec
PMID:Clinical performance of the Duromedics bileaflet pyrolite mechanical prosthesis. 145 86
To ascertain the incidence and significance of bacteremia associated with transesophageal echocardiography (TEE), 132 consecutive patients (aged 17 to 73 years) free of apparent infection who were undergoing 135 transesophageal echocardiographic procedures from October 1990 to August 1991, were prospectively studied. For each procedure, two sets of blood cultures were obtained for culture 30 to 60 minutes before TEE, immediately after, and 180 to 240 minutes after the procedure. For each blood culture, 10 ml of venous blood was evenly inoculated into aerobic and anaerobic culture bottles and inoculated for 7 days using a radiometric system. A throat swab was obtained immediately before each procedure. Three of 270 preprocedure blood cultures were positive for Bacillus cereus, Staphylococcus simulans, and Peptostreptococcus species, respectively. No blood culture was positive in the immediate postprocedure period. Two of 270 late blood samples grew Staphylococcus epidermidis in the same patient. Nevertheless, the microorganisms isolated from blood cultures were different from those isolated from the throat swab. No patients had fever or evidence of infective
endocarditis
after TEE during the follow-up period. It is concluded that the incidence of TEE-related bacteremia is extremely low, and a general recommendation for antibiotic prophylaxis during TEE is not warranted.
Am Heart J 1992
Dec
PMID:Prospective study of blood culture during transesophageal echocardiography. 146 11
Human infection with Pasteurella multocida is the leading cause of animal bite wound infection. Life-threatening infection may occur in patients with a variety of underlying disorders and an immunocompromised state. Infective endocarditis with P. multocida is very rare and only a few clinically diagnosed cases have been reported. Described here is an autopsy case of a 61-year-old man with polycystic kidney disease who had P. multocida bacteremia and acute infective
endocarditis
with multiple bacterial clumps involving bicuspid aortic valve. The organisms were gram negative. Apparently the sepsis with P. multocida was acquired via licking of leg ulcers by his pet dog, establishing an animal-related causal relationship. Because P. multocida is a very common flora of many animals, infection with this organism probably occurs more frequently than is commonly appreciated. High index of suspicion and early diagnosis, especially in immunocompromised patients, are warranted because the disease is potentially life threatening, yet is a readily treatable infection.
Am J Clin Pathol 1992
Dec
PMID:Pasteurella multocida endocarditis. 146 53
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