9. Infective endocarditis Flashcards
Definition of infective endocarditis
A serious infection characterized by microbial colonization or invasion of the heart valves or the mural endocardium; traditionally classified as being acute (by highly virulent pathogens infecting normal valves) or subacute (by organisms of low virulence infecting abnormal valves)
Causes of infective endocarditis
- Subacute endocarditis
- General medical patient: Streptococcus viridans (75%)
- Geriatric patient: Streptococcus viridans (50%),
Enterococcus faecalis & other gram negatives (50%) - Acute infective endocarditis
- Staphylococcus aureus (especially in IV drug abusers) - Prosthetic Valve Endocarditis
- Coagulase negative staphylococci (e.g. Staphylococcus epidermidis)
Frequency of specific valve involvement
- Mitral valve only (25-30%)
- Aortic valve only (25-35%)
- Mitral + aortic valve (10%)
- Tricuspid valve (10%)
- Prosthetic valve (10%)
- Congenital heart disease (10%)
Pathogenesis of subacute infective endocarditis
- Source of low virulence pathogens: normal commensals of skin, mouth, gut, respiratory tract, genitourinary tract
- Pre-existing abnormal heart valve causes derangement of blood flow, resulting in the formation of sterile platelet-fibrin deposits on endocardium & heart valves (vegetations)
- Blood-borne pathogens can then get enmeshed in these vegetations
- Causes insidious, less destructive infection
Pathogenesis of acute infective endocarditis
- Source of high virulence pathogens: intravenous drug abuse, open heart surgery, septicaemia
- Highly virulent blood-borne pathogens can directly invade the endocardium and heart valves (even if they were previously normal)
- Causes rapidly destructive lesions
Morphology of infective endocarditis
- [Gross] Hallmark is presence of vegetations (friable, bulky) on heart valves
- [Histology] Vegetations comprises tangled mass of fibrin, organisms (visualized with Gram stain) & inflammatory cells
Pathological effects & complications of infective endocarditis
- Locally
- Valve rupture & scarring
- Myocardial ring abscess
- Suppurative pericarditis - Distally
- Embolization of vegetations (causing septic infarcts)
- Immune complex mediated disorders (vasculitis,
glomerulonephritis)
- Anemia of chronic disease, splenomegaly
Clinical features (of long-standing infective endocarditis)
- Splinter hemorrhages in nails (manifestation of microthromboemboli)
- Janeway lesions (erythematous or hemorrhagic non-tender lesions on the palms or soles)
- Osler nodes (subcutaneous nodules in the pulp of digits)
- Roth spots (retinal hemorrhages)
Definition of non-infected vegetations
Vegetations (thrombi on heart valves) formed via non-infectious endocarditis; two such types of endocarditis are recognized
Types of endocarditis from non-infected vegetations
- Nonbacterial thrombotic (Marantic) endocarditis
2. Libmann-Sacks Disease
Nonbacterial thrombotic endocarditis
- Characterized by the deposition of small, sterile, platelet-rich thrombi on the leaflets of the cardiac valves which do not elicit local inflammatory reactions
- Often encountered in:
- Severely debilitated patients (e.g. cancer or sepsis) with an underlying systemic hypercoagulable state
- Endocardial trauma (e.g. from indwelling catheter)
Libman-Sacks Disease (Endocarditis of SLE)
Characterized by mitral & tricuspid valvulitis with small
sterile vegetations
Complications of artificial heart valves
- Thromboembolism
- Necessitates long-term anti-coagulation therapy with its attendant risks of hemorrhagic complications - Infective endocarditis
- Valve deterioration with valvular insufficiency
- Mechanical hemolysis