Infective endocarditis Flashcards

1
Q

Definition

A

Infection of endocardial surface of the heart
Acute= days to weeks
Subacute= weeks to months->vague constitutional

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2
Q

Etiology

A
Viridans group Strep
S. Aureus->catheter, IVDU
Enterococci->previous GU surgery/instrumentation
Coagulase negative Staph->neonates, prosthetic
Fungi
Coxiella burneti
S bovis->elderly, adenoC of bowel
HACEK in culture negative
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3
Q

Pathophysiology

A

Infection on valve which have sustained endothelial injury
Platelets and fibrin adhere to collagen, prothrombotic mileui
Bacteremia leads to colonisation of thrombus, further deposition= mature infected vegetation

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4
Q

Presentation in native valve

A

Non IVDU: viridans, enterococci, staph

IVDU: Staph, strep, gram negative. Associated with right sided

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5
Q

Presentation in prosthetic

A

Early: Staph and coagulase negative
Late: Strep, enterococci, staph

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6
Q

High risk population

A

History of previous
Prosthetic
CHD
Cardiac transplant

Denta
Invasive of respiratory, infected skin, MSK

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7
Q

Clinical features

A
fever/chills (common)
night sweats, malaise, fatigue, anorexia, weight loss, myalgias (common)
weakness (common)
arthralgias (common)
headache (common)
shortness of breath (common)
meningeal signs (uncommon)
cardiac murmur (uncommon)
Janeway lesions (uncommon)
Osler nodes (uncommon)
Roth spots (uncommon)
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8
Q

Investigations

A

FBC->anaemia, leukocytosis
UEC, glucose->N/ +urea
Urinalysis->RBC casts, WBC casts, protein+, pyuria
BC
ECG->prolonged PR, non-specific ST changes
EchoC->mobil, valvular lesions

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9
Q

Duke criteria

A

2 major or 1 major and 3 minor or 5 minor
1. Major:
+BC->typical organism from 2 separate BC, persistently +ve BC
Evidence of endoC involvement->evidence of mass on echo, abscess, new regurgtation murmur

  1. Minor:
    Predisposing heart/IVDU
    Fever >38
    Vascular->major arterial emboli, septic pulmonary infarcts, myoctic aneurysm, conjunctival hemorrhage, JWL
    Immunological: GN, Osler nodes, Roth spots, RF
    Microbiological->+ve not meeting major
    Echo->Consistent, not meeting major
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10
Q

Management

A
ABC
Oxygen
2 large IV cannula, catheter if required
Manage decompensated HF if required
BC, FBC, urinalysis, glucose
Call cardiology, ID, surgery
Start antibiotics, fluids
Admit
Arrange Echo
Repeat BC
Regular monitoring
Considerations for surgery
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11
Q

Antibiotic regime

A

Native valve empirical: benpen (Vanc if suspect MRSA) + gentamicin + flucloxacillin

If hypersensitive to penicillin-> gent + vanc + cefazolin

Prosthetic/PaceM: Vanc + fluclox + gent

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12
Q

Indications for surgical management

A

Intractable congestive heart failure caused by valve dysfunction >1 serious systemic
embolic episode, or large (>10 mm) vegetation with high risk for embolism
Uncontrolled infection, eg, positive cultures after 7 d of therapy
No effective antimicrobial therapy (eg, fungal endocarditis)
Most cases of prosthetic valve endocarditis, especially S aureus prosthetic valve infection
Local suppurative complications, eg, myocardial abscess

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13
Q

Recommendations for followup

A
  1. Before completing antimicrobial therapy, patients should receive transthoracic echocardiogram (TTE) to establish a new baseline.
  2. In addition, it is generally recommended that patients with prosthetic valve endocarditis undergo trans-oesophageal echocardiogram (TOE) at the completion of therapy.
  3. All patients should have blood cultures done at 1 and 2 weeks following therapy to ensure they are not persistently bacteraemic.
  4. Patients with risk factors such as intravenous drug use should be referred promptly to a cessation programme. I
  5. n addition, all patients should be educated regarding the signs and symptoms of IE, as, if there is a recurrence, early treatment may prevent long-term complications.
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