INFECTIVE ENDOCARDITIS
Infection of the endocardium, usually involving diseased cardiac valves, is termed infective endocarditis. It is most frequently caused by bacteria but can also be caused by fungi. It is classified as acute or subacute depending on the clinical course of the disease. More virulent organisms (e.g., staphylococci, group A beta-hemolytic streptococci, and pneumococci) tend to produce the acute form of the disease with rapid progression and death within a few weeks if untreated. Streptococcus viridans (alpha-hemolytic streptococci) causes approximately 50 per cent of all cases of endocarditis and usually follows a subacute course, also eventually fatal if untreated but lasting several months. It is commonly preceded by dental surgery. Other bacteria that cause endocarditis relatively commonly include the en-terococci, gonococci, and Streptococcus bovis (a group D nonenterococcal streptococcus). Gram-negative organisms uncommonly cause infective endocarditis. Enterococcal and Streptococcus bovis endocarditis may occur after genitourinary or gastrointestinal surgery. The incidence of Streptococcus bovis endocarditis is increased in patients with carcinoma of the colon. Staphylococcal endocarditis, common in narcotic addicts, may follow wound infections or prosthetic cardiac valve surgery. Staphylococcus aureus usually results in acute endocarditis, whereas Staphylococcus epidermidis endocarditis is usually subacute. Fungal endocarditis, rare but increasing in frequency, probably owing to more patients with valvular prostheses and drug addiction, is usually due to Candida albicans, Histoplasma capsulatum, or Aspergillus. A variety of other organisms can rarely cause endocarditis.
Endocarditis is characterized by vegetations, consisting of infecting organisms embedded in platelet-fibrin thrombi with an inflammatory reaction mainly of mononuclear cells, usually located on the valvular leaflets. The valve tissue beneath the vegetation undergoes destruction. Endocarditis occurs in the left more commonly than the right heart. The mitral valve is involved most frequently, followed by the aortic and tricuspid valves. Right-sided lesions such as on apparently normal tricuspid valves have become more common recently due to intravenous drug addiction.
The infection may cause rupture of the valve tissue itself or of its chordal structures, leading to either gradual or acute valvular regurgitation. Some virulent bacterial (for example, Staphylococcus aureus) or fungal vegetations may become large enough to obstruct the valve orifice or create a large embolus. Aneurysms of a sinus of Valsalva may occur and can rupture into the pericardial space. The infection may invade the interventricular septum, causing intramyocardial abscesses or septal rupture that can involve the conduction system of the heart. Peripheral septic emboli may occur with left-sided and septic pulmonary emboli with right-sided endocarditis.
Patients with pre-existing valvular heart disease are at particular risk for developing endocarditis. Rheumatic heart disease, congenital heart disease, hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy, mitral valve prolapse, degenerative changes in valves, and prosthetic valves are predisposing features. All these lesions are characterized by the production of turbulent flow. Once endothelium has been damaged and bacteremia has occurred, a vegetation may be established, usually on the valve surface toward the chamber of lower pressure (for example, on the atrial surface of an abnormal mitral valve). Infective endocarditis in a patient with a patent ductus arteriosus occurs on the low pressure pulmonic side where more turbulence and eddying of blood occur. Atrial septal defects do not predispose to infective endocarditis because little turbulent flow is created from this defect. Dental, gastrointestinal, and genitourinary manipulations are the most frequent sources of bacteremia causing endocarditis. This transient bacteremia, in the presence of pre-existing valvular lesions, is the most common predisposing factor to endocarditis, followed by intravenous drug addiction and cardiac surgery. In acute infective endocarditis, previously normal valves may be involved in up to half of cases. Only a small number of these highly invasive bacteria appear to be required to initiate infection. On the other hand, in the subacute infection, sterile platelet-fibrin thrombi caused by the trauma of the jet from the turbulent hemodynamics are thought to precede and subsequently become infected from the transient bacteremia.
Males are affected more commonly than females. Patients with subacute endocarditis are often minimally symptomatic, most commonly having nonspecific symptoms that may be overlooked such as fever, chills, sweats, malaise, anorexia, or weight loss. Acute endocarditis presents with a more dramatic illness and may include acute congestive heart failure or manifestations of pulmonary or systemic emboli (e.g., renal, splenic, retinal, coronary, or cerebral infarction). Mycotic (infected) aneurysms can occur, especially in the cerebral circulation, giving rise to subarachnoid hemorrhages.
Heart murmur and fever are the two major findings and are present in about 95 per cent of patients. The heart murmurs are regurgitant, systolic if due to mitral or tricuspid infection, and diastolic if due to aortic regurgitation. Rarely obstructive murmurs result. A murmur varying in duration and intensity over time suggests endocarditis. The murmurs of the underlying cardiac disease may be present and sometimes confuse the diagnosis. In patients with tricuspid endocarditis, a heart murmur may be absent. In addition, patients with acute endocarditis of the left heart may develop a murmur only during the course of therapy after the diagnosis has been made from positive blood cultures or a peripheral embolic phenomenon. A murmur usually appears at some time during the course or treatment of acute endocarditis.
Clinical and laboratory manifestations of endocarditis are summarized in Table 10-1. Peripheral stigmata are much less frequent than in the pre-antibiotic era and are thought to be caused by septic, embolic, and immunologic consequences of the infection. Chest x-ray findings are nonspecific and show evidence of any pre-existing cardiac disease in addition to signs of progressive ventricular failure from the endocarditis. Multiple pulmonary infiltrates may be a manifestation of septic pulmonary infarctions from right-sided endocarditis.
The most important laboratory evaluation is the blood culture. Three to six cultures should be obtained over a period of several hours. A small number of patients may have persistently negative blood cultures secondary either to infection with an organism difficult to culture (for example, fungal endocarditis) or to previous antibiotic therapy. Aerobic and anaerobic cultures should be obtained. If previous antibiotic therapy has been administered, cultures should be obtained over several days if possible.
Echocardiography may establish any underlying valvular abnormality predisposing the patient to endocarditis, or the complications of endocarditis such as flail mitral valve leaflet, intramy-ocardial abscess, or hemodynamic abnormalities. Vegetations may be identified directly if they exceed approximately 3 mm in diameter. Smaller vegetations may not be noted, and therefore failure to visualize vegetations does not exclude endocarditis. Echocardiography can identify fungal vegetations most frequently because these vegetations are generally large. In many patients the diagnosis is clear, and cardiac surgery may be performed without cardiac catheterization. If catheterization is done, one must be cautious not to dislodge a vegetation.
The differential diagnosis of infective endocarditis is broad and includes viral syndromes, acute rheumatic fever, atrial myxoma, connective tissue diseases such as lupus erythematosus, neurologic disorders, and occult neoplasms. Definitive diagnosis usually relies on blood culture results. When cultures are negative, the diagnosis must be made indirectly by echocardiography and peripheral stigmata. It is sometimes difficult to determine in an elderly patient with a systolic murmur whether positive blood cultures represent endocarditis or bacterial seeding of the blood from another source; at times, empirical treatment for endocarditis without confirmation of the diagnosis may be required.
Endocarditis on a prosthetic valve usually presents similarly to native valve endocarditis. The organisms causing prosthetic valve endocarditis in the early postoperative period are usually those involved in infected surgical wounds (e.g., staphylococci) and in pulmonary and urinary tract infections. Endocarditis in the late postoperative period commonly involves organisms that occur in bacteremia related with dental, gastrointestinal,or genitourinary procedures as does native endocarditis.
The natural history of untreated endocarditis is universally fatal, although the time course for acute and subacute forms is different. Despite the availability of antibiotic and surgical therapy, the mortality and morbidity are still high. Patients who are older, have more virulent organisms, have a longer duration of illness before the institution of therapy, have extensive valvular damage, congestive heart failure, renal involvement, or other complications such as myocarditis, myocardial abscess, mycotic aneurysms, or embolization are more likely to have an unfavorable outcome.
Bactericidal antibiotics that have been demonstrated to be effective toward the specific organism isolated should be employed. Dosage should be followed by measuring the antibacterial activity of the patient’s serum against the organism, and dilutions of at least 1:8 of the patient’s serum should inhibit bacterial growth. The duration of therapy is controversial but is usually recommended to be six weeks for most infecting organisms. Initial treatment can be delayed until identification of the infecting organism in patients with subacute endocarditis but must be instituted empirically immediately after obtaining cultures in patients with acute endocarditis. Antibiotics are usually administered intravenously. Streptococcus viridans responds to penicillin G; streptomycin or gentamicin is sometimes added to the regimen because of in vitro synergy. Vancomycin can be substituted in individuals allergic to penicillin. Enterococcal endocarditis must be treated with penicillin or vancomycin, plus an aminoglycoside. Streptococcus bovis is sensitive to penicillin, and therapy is the same as for viridans streptococci. Staphylococci are treated with penicillin G if they are non-penicillinase-producing or with semisynthetic penicillins such as nafcil-lin, oxacillin, or methicillin if they produce penicillinase or if that fact is unknown. Methicillin-resistaht strains have been identified for which vancomycin must be used. Therapy for gram-negative bacteria should be guided by antibiotic sensitivity testing and may include drugs such as car-benicillin and/or aminoglycosides. Fungal endocarditis is treated with amphotericin B, sometimes with flucytosine added. Fungal endocarditis usually requires surgical intervention.
Heart failure is treated conventionally with digitalis, diuretics, and afterload reduction. Regurgitant mitral or aortic valve lesions may respond to afterload therapy with intravenous nitroprus-side as a temporizing measure. Severe heart failure must be treated with valve replacement, waiting until the infection has been effectively treated if possible, but in the presence of active infection with concomitant! antibiotic therapy if necessary. Indications for surgery in infective endocarditis include heart failure not responding to medical management; recurrent infection despite apparently adequate medical therapy; infections on most prosthetic valves, especially if prosthetic valve malfunction is present; infections with orheart valves are at particularly high risk. Alpha-hemolytic (viridans) streptococci are the most common causes of endocarditis following dental procedures, and antibiotic prophylaxis should be directed at these organisms, whereas prophylaxis after gastrointestinal/genitourinary procedures must include antibiotics to treat enterococcal infections. Antibiotic regimens are described in.
- Renal Artery Stenosis
- Blood Chemistries
- GENERAL SURGERY IN THE PATIENT WITH HEART DISEASE
- Hepatic Encephalopathy
- CLINICAL TESTS OF DIGESTION AND ABSORPTION
- OXYGEN
- Management
- Clinical Presentation
- Hepatorenal Syndrome
- Urolithiasis
- Sickle Cell Anemia (SS)
- ORIGIN OF ABDOMINAL PAIN
- ACUTE AND CHRONIC HEPATITIS - DEFIRILTIORI
- Screening and Prevention
- Ascites
- CLINICAL PRESENTATION
- ARRHYTHMIAS in ACUTE MYOCARDIAL MFARCTION
- GRANULOMATOUS LIVER DISEASE
- VARIATiT ANGINA
- Liver Failure
- CARDIAC DEVELOPMENT
- VENTILATION
- MOXIOUS GASES AflD FUMES
- THE AIRWAY STRUCTURE
- ACID-PEPTIC DISEASE
- DC CARDIOVERSION AND DEFIBRILLATION
- Initial Assessment
- Systemic Vasculitides
- Phosphate Balance
- Portal Hypertension
- DISEASES OF THE ESOPHAGUS
- Ultrasound and Computed Tomography
- LIVER ABSCESS
- Disopyramide
- NONOBSTRUCTIVE CAUSES OF ISCHEMIC HEART DISEASE