Condition- Infective endocarditis Flashcards
What is infective endocarditis?
An infection involveing the endocardial surface of the heart including the valves, the chordae tendineae, sites of septal defects or the mural endocardium
List 3 common organisms causing infective endocarditis…
- 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
Vegetations form when organisms deposit on heart valves. What do these vegetations comprise of?
- Platelets
- Fibrin
- Infective organisms colonise the thrombus
List some risk factors for developing infective endocarditis
- Abnormal Valves (congenital, calcification, rheumatic heart disease)
- Prosthetic heart valves
- Turbulent blood flow (PDA)
- Recent dental work/ poor dental hygiene
- IV injections
Fever + New murmur =
Endocarditis unless proven otherwise
List some of the presenting symptoms of infective endocarditis (+mnemonic)
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
List some of the signs of infective endocarditis on physical examination (+mnemonic)
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
Which sign might you see on a retinal examinaion of a patient with infective endocarditis?
ROTH SPOTS
What might you see in an FBC of someone with IE
ACD (normocytic anaemia)
Neutrophilia
List some appropriate investigations for a patient presenting with infective endocarditis
- BLOODS: WCC, normocytic anaemia, ESR/CRP, U&Es, Blood culture
- IMAGING: Echocardiogram, ECG, CXR
- URINALYSIS: haematuria, proteinuria
What might you see on an ECG of a patient with Infective Endocarditis?
Long P-R interval
Which system is used to classify the severity of Infective Endocarditis
Duke’s Criteria
State how Duke’s criteria is used to classify Infective endocarditis
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
How many of the Duke’s criteria need to be fulfilled to conclude the diagnosis of IE?
- 2 major
- 1 major and 3 minor
- 5 minor
What is the first line therapy for someone with IE and their own native valve?
Beta-lactam (benzylpencillin/amoxicillin) +/- gentamicin