Infective endocarditis Flashcards

1
Q

What is infective endocarditis?

A

infection of inner surface of heart - usually affects abnormal heart valves

rare but 100% fatal without antibiotics

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2
Q

Common organisms that cause infective endocarditis

A

Staph aureus - very acute
Strep viridans (normal oral commensal) - slow process
Strep faecalis (normal gut commensal)

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3
Q

What is vegetation in infective endocarditis and what risk does this pose?

A

collection of organisms and thrombus
embolisation risk

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4
Q

Clinical presentation of infective endocarditis

A

fever
night sweats
malaise
anorexia
weight loss
aches + pains
vasculitic rashes
splinter haemorrhages
murmur (original lesion + valve erosion)
glomerulonephritis
enlarged spleen (very chronic infection)
clubbing (very chronic infection)
Osler’s nodes, Janeway lesions, Roth spots

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5
Q

What type of rash is seen in infective endocarditis?

A

haemorrhagic rash

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6
Q

What is a roth spot?

A

retinal haemorrhages with white or pale centres, commonly associated with subacute bacterial endocarditis and immune complex mediated vasculitis

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7
Q

Major complication of infective endocarditis?

A

systemic embolism (from a vegetation breaking off)

heart failure (due to valve damage)

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8
Q

Cerebrovascular complications of infective endocarditis

A

embolism (less likely after ~1 week of antibiotics)

infected aneurysm (mycotic aneurysm)

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9
Q

Diagnosis of infective endocarditis

A

clinical suspicion
blood cultures (do before antibiotics)
inflammatory markers high (CRP, ESR)
low grade anaemia and mildly raised wbc
echocardiography to image vegetations, valve damage and abscesses - transoesophageal better

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10
Q

Endocarditis treatment/management

A

antibiotics - usually IV 4-6 weeks
‘The Heart Team’ - cardiology/microbiology/cardiac surgery

surgery urgently considered if:
- haemodynamic deterioration due to damage caused by the infection
- infection not responding to antibiotics
- abscess seen on echo
- prosthetic infection

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11
Q

Infective endocarditis prevention

A

antibiotic prophylaxis for procedures where infective endocarditis is a risk when the patient has predisposing heart conditions

good oral hygiene and regular dental review

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12
Q

Cardiac conditions with highest risk of infective endocarditis

A

prosthetic valves
previous IE
congenital heart disease (any cyanotic or other repaired using prosthetic material)

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