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Query: UMLS:C0018801 (
heart failure
)
72,216
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Sixteen cases of chronic Q fever are described. In eight there was a history of exposure to infection from farms or farm products. All had valvular heart disease, involving the mitral valve in nine and the aortic valve in seven. Infection occurred on a prosthetic valve in two patients. Arterial embolism was common. Venous thrombosis occured in three patients, and pulmonary embolism occurred in three other patients. Complement fixing antibodies to phase 1 antigen were found in a titre of 1:200 or greater in all except two patients. In one of these post-mortem examination revealed rickettsial bodies in mitral valve vegetations, and in the other Coxiella burneti was isolated from heart valve tissue. The majority presented with infective endocarditis but two presented primarily with liver disease. All patients had evidence of liver involvement and in one this led to death from cirrhosis. Abnormal tests of liver function, particularly hyperglobulinaemia, raised alkaline phsophatase and abnormal bromsulphthalein retention were found in all patients. Hepatic histology was abnormal in all eight patients in whom it was studied. The commonest features were mononuclear cell infiltration of the portal tracts and prominence of the sinusoidal Kupffer cells. Patchy focal necrosis of parenchymal cells, granulomata, fatty change, and eosinophilia of the sinusoidal walls were also noted in several patients and cirrhosis developed in one. Six patients had a purpuric rash, and in 12 there was thrombocytopenia. It is suggested that the presence of hepatomegaly and liver involvement and thrombocytopenia may help to differentiate
Q fever endocarditis
from bacterial endocarditis. Raised serum IgM and IgA levels occured frequently, but with only a moderate dominance of IgM. Sheep cell agglutination and latex fixation tests for rheumatoid factor were occasionally positive. Several features of the disease suggest the possibility that immune-complex mechanisms may play a role in chronic Q fever. Treatment was with prolonged courses of tetracycline usually combined with lincomycin. Seven patients underwent valve replacement surgery for haemodynamic reasons. Five patients died; two from
heart failure
, one from cirrhosis, one seven days after valve replacement and one from intraperitoneal haemorrhage following percutaneous liver biopsy. Three patients have survived for more than five years, and another six for more than three and a half years after diagnosis. Of these nine patients, three received medical therapy alone and six required valve replacement as well. Antibiotics have been discontinued in four patients who have had valve surgery and three others. Six patients had received antibiotics for continuous periods varying from 29-62 months. In the period after stopping therapy varying from 15-21 months, no relapse has occured. A seventh patient, who had received antibiotics for four months prior to valve replacement, has survived 43 months after the withdrawal of antibiotics...
...
PMID:Chronic Q fever. 94 Sep 18
We report a case of
Q fever endocarditis
in a patient who presented with a slight pyrexia and acute
cardiac failure
due to aortic incompetence. The diagnosis was made by detecting high titres of serum IgG and IgA antibody against Coxiella burnetii phase I antigens and confirmed by demonstrating C. burnetii on the excised aortic valve using immunofluorescence and electron microscopy. Aortic valve replacement was followed by initially successful antibiotic treatment for 15 months. Reappearance of IgA anti-phase I antibodies 5 months later suggested continued presence of bacteria, although the patient's condition remained satisfactory. In endemic areas, such as rural southern France,
Q fever endocarditis
should be considered when there is evidence of acute heart valve damage but are few other features of infection.
...
PMID:Acute heart failure due to Q fever endocarditis. 318 Nov 78
Three patients developed
Q fever endocarditis
on porcine bioprosthetic valves. They had a subacute or chronic course with nonspecific symptoms, enlargement of the liver and spleen, and
cardiac failure
due to destruction of the cusps, without disruption of the valve ring. High-phase I-specific IgG and IgA antibody titers against Coxiella burnetii were found. C. burnetii was isolated in each patient by inoculating suspensions of valve tissue into a human fetal diploid fibroblast cell line, which was grown as monolayers on slides contained inside rubber-stoppered tube cultures. Patients were treated successfully with doxycycline, cotrimoxazole, and valve replacement and were followed up for periods of 24 to 42 months; no evidence of deterioration was found. The human fetal diploid cell culture may be an expeditious, easy, and safe method to isolate C. burnetii from cardiac valves. Valve replacement seemed necessary to cure prosthetic-valve endocarditis due to C. burnetii infection. Combined therapy with doxycycline and cotrimoxazole may control the disease and prevent reinfection of the homografts replacing the valves.
...
PMID:Q fever endocarditis on porcine bioprosthetic valves. Clinicopathologic features and microbiologic findings in three patients treated with doxycycline, cotrimoxazole, and valve replacement. 325 69
A 30-year-old man underwent aortic and mitral valve replacement for the treatment of
Q fever endocarditis
. Postoperatively, paravalvular leak of the mitral prosthesis, progressive deterioration in cardiac function, and intractable
heart failure
developed. As a result, the patient underwent orthotopic heart transplantation 15 months after his initial valve operation. The patient is clinically well 14 months after transplantation.
...
PMID:Heart transplantation for Q fever endocarditis. 797 59
A 51-year-old woman, originating from Algeria, developed
Q fever endocarditis
on porcine bioprosthetic mitral valve. She had chronic course with nonspecific symptoms, such as dyspnea and fever, hepatosplenomegaly, and developed progressive
cardiac failure
. Worsening of hemodynamic state led to prosthetic valve replacement. Hemocultures were all negative, and the diagnosis of Q fever was unexpectedly performed by systematic screening for specific serum antibody to Coxiella burnetti. High phase I and II specific IgG and IgA antibody titers against C burnetii were found. The patient was treated by doxycycline and ofloxacin, and improved rapidly. Prosthetic valve constitutes likely predisposing factor for the development of chronic
Q fever endocarditis
. This observation emphasizes the need to search for Q fever in prosthetic valve dysfunction, in particular when hemocultures are negative.
...
PMID:[Coxiella burnetii endocarditis on a bioprosthetic valve: review of the literature apropos of a case]. 819 Nov 3
The so-called zoonotic endocarditis is transmitted from animals to humans and is frequently found in some cattle-raising countries. Brucella endocarditis is a destructive process of the aortic valve with abscess formation that commonly leads to
heart failure
.
Q fever endocarditis
is a more indolent infection, but it is also capable of producing severe valvular damage and hemodynamic compromise. Treatment of zoonotic endocarditis includes the prolonged administration of doxycycline in combination with other antimicrobial agents and a judicious use of valve replacement. Mortality of Brucella endocarditis has been decreased significantly by a medical-surgical approach to treatment. On the basis of serologic and valve tissue culture results, no treatment is consistently able to cure
Q fever endocarditis
, and thus mortality of this infection remains high.
...
PMID:Zoonotic endocarditis. 846 49
Fifteen cases of
Q fever endocarditis
that occurred in 1999-2000 in southern France are described and compared with 15 cases from the same area reported in 1987. Significant decreases were found in the prevalences of
heart failure
, hepatomegaly, inflammatory syndrome, anemia, leukopenia, and abnormal liver function test results in patients who had
Q fever endocarditis
after 1997. This was probably the result of a reduction in the delay before diagnosis of the disease and of the use of novel, effective antibiotic regimens.
...
PMID:Changing clinical presentation of Q fever endocarditis. 1180 85
Q fever is a zoonotic disease caused by Coxiella burnetii, an obligate intracellular bacterium, which cannot be grown using routine blood culture methods. Although C. burnetii is reported to be the causative agent in approximately 50% of blood culture-negative infective endocarditis cases in developed countries, the incidence in Turkey is yet to be defined. The clinical course of
Q fever endocarditis
is generally subacute and chronic; the disease may be present for years with only subtle symptoms and no vegetation visible on echocardiography while the bacteria gradually destroy the heart valves. This is the case of the successful treatment of a young man with
Q fever endocarditis
that had an acute clinical course. In 1 month, he developed New York Heart Association class IV
heart failure
and a large, 3-cm vegetation was observed on an echocardiogram.
...
PMID:Q fever endocarditis: is it always subacute or chronic? 3197 21