Condition- Infective endocarditis Flashcards

1
Q

What is infective endocarditis?

A

An infection involveing the endocardial surface of the heart including the valves, the chordae tendineae, sites of septal defects or the mural endocardium

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2
Q

List 3 common organisms causing infective endocarditis…

A
  • Streptococcus (40%)- mainly a-haemolytic S.viridance and S.bovis
  • Staphylococcus (35%)- S. Aureus and S. Epidermis
  • Enterococcus (20%)- Usually E.faecalis

NOTE: Staph aureus is now the most common cause of infective endocarditis

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3
Q

Vegetations form when organisms deposit on heart valves. What do these vegetations comprise of?

A
  • Platelets
  • Fibrin
  • Infective organisms colonise the thrombus
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4
Q

List some risk factors for developing infective endocarditis

A
  • Abnormal Valves (congenital, calcification, rheumatic heart disease)
  • Prosthetic heart valves
  • Turbulent blood flow (PDA)
  • Recent dental work/ poor dental hygiene
  • IV injections
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5
Q

Fever + New murmur =

A

Endocarditis unless proven otherwise

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6
Q

List some of the presenting symptoms of infective endocarditis (+mnemonic)

A

Severe Cardiac Affliction Makes Many Feverish

Skin lesions
Confusion
Arthralgia
Myalgia
Malaise
Fever, sweats, weight loss (FLAWS)

  • FLAWS
    • Fever + sweats/ chills/ rigors
    • Lethargy
    • Weight Loss
    • Sweats
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7
Q

List some of the signs of infective endocarditis on physical examination (+mnemonic)

A

Numerous Signs Can Point To Valve Sickness
New regurgitant murmur
Splenomegaly
Clubbing
Pyrexia
Tachycardia
Vascular lesions (Osler’s nodes. Janeway lesions, roth spots, splinter haemorrhages)
Signs of arrhythmia

  • Petechiae on pharyngeal and conjunctival mucosa
  • Glomerulonephritis

FROM JANE C

Fever

Roth Spots

Osler’s nodes

Murmur

Janeway Lesions

Anaemia

Nail – splinter hemorrhages

Emboli

Clubbing

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8
Q

Which sign might you see on a retinal examinaion of a patient with infective endocarditis?

A

ROTH SPOTS

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9
Q

What might you see in an FBC of someone with IE

A

ACD (normocytic anaemia)

Neutrophilia

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10
Q

List some appropriate investigations for a patient presenting with infective endocarditis

A
  • BLOODS: WCC, normocytic anaemia, ESR/CRP, U&Es, Blood culture
  • IMAGING: Echocardiogram, ECG, CXR
  • URINALYSIS: haematuria, proteinuria
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11
Q

What might you see on an ECG of a patient with Infective Endocarditis?

A

Long P-R interval

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12
Q

Which system is used to classify the severity of Infective Endocarditis

A

Duke’s Criteria

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13
Q

State how Duke’s criteria is used to classify Infective endocarditis

A

MAJOR:

  • +ve blood culture for IE from 2 seperate blood cultures
  • persistent bacteraemia from 2 blood cultures taken >12hrs apart

MINOR:

  • Predisposing heart condition/ IVD use
  • Pyrexia >38oC
  • Vascular events (emboli, infarcts, aneurysms, haemorrhages, Janeway lesions)
  • Immunological phenomenon (glomerulonephritis, osler’s nodes, roth spots, rheumatoid factors)
  • Micro evidence: +ve cultures which don’t meet major criteria
  • Echo: consistent with IE
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14
Q

How many of the Duke’s criteria need to be fulfilled to conclude the diagnosis of IE?

A
  • 2 major
  • 1 major and 3 minor
  • 5 minor
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15
Q

What is the first line therapy for someone with IE and their own native valve?

A

Beta-lactam (benzylpencillin/amoxicillin) +/- gentamicin

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16
Q

What is the first line therapy for someone with IE and a prosthetic valve?

A
  • vancomycin + rifampicin + low-dose gentamicin
17
Q

List some complications of IE

A
  • valve incompetence
  • Intracardiac fistulae/ abscesses
  • Stroke (ischaemic + haemorrhagic)
  • Aneurysm
  • Heart failure
  • Renal failure
  • Glomerulonephritis