Endocarditis Flashcards
Risk factors of infective endocarditis
- IV drug users
- valvular heart disease
- prosthetic heart valves
- congential heart disease
- implantable cardiac devices e.g. pacemaker
- poor dental hygiene
- immunocompromised
- chronic kidney disease
What microorganisms cause infective endocarditis?
- staphylococcus aureus (most common)
- streptococcus (e.g. strep viridans)
- enterococcus
Presentation of endocarditis
- fever
- night sweats
- fatigue
- muscle aches
- janeway lesions
- osler’s nodes
- roth spots
- splinter haemorrhages
- finger clubbing
Key examination findings in infective endocarditis
- new or changing heart murmur
- petechiae
- Janeway lesions
- Osler’s nodes
- splinter haemorrhages
- Roth spots
- splenomegaly
- clubbing
What are Roth spots?
Haemorrhages on retina seen in fundoscopy
Sign of infective endocarditis
What are Janeway lesions?
painless red flat macules on palms and soles of feet
What are Osler’s nodes?
tender red/purple nodules on the pads of the fingers and toes
What are splinter haemorrhages?
thin red/brown lines along the fingernails
Investigations of infective endocarditis
- 3 blood cultures at least 6 hours apart + taken from different sites
- transoesophageal echocardiogram
- CXR
- ECG
- FBCs, U&Es + LFTs
What criteria is used to diagnose infective endocarditis?
Modified Duke Criteria
What is the Modified Duke Criteria?
What is it used to diagnose?
Infective endocarditis
- one major + there minor criteria OR five minor criteria needed to diagnose
.
Major:
- 2 positive blood cultures collected at least 12 hours apart
- evidence of endocardial involvement e.g. new murmur, vegetation seen on echo, abscess
.
Minor:
- Predispotion
- fever >38°
- vascular phenomena e.g. Janeway lesions, splenic infarction
- immunological phenomena e.g. Osler’s nodes, Roth spots
- microbiological phenomena
Management of infective endocarditis
- IV broad spectrum antibiotics e.g. amoxicillin
- more specific antibiotic once causative organism identified
- antibiotics continued for 4 weeks or 6 weeks if prosthetic heart valves
- surgery
When might surgery be required in infective endocarditis?
- heart failure relating to valve pathology
- large vegetations or abscesses
- infections not responding to antibiotics
- relapse after optimal medical therapy
- valve obstruction
Complications of infective endocarditis
- heart valve damage > regurgitation
- heart failure
- infection + non infective emboli > abscesses, strokes, splenic infarction
- glomerulonephritis > renal impairment