Endocarditis Flashcards
Define endocarditis
What are the classifications of endocarditis?
Endocarditis is inflammation of the endocardium of the heart.
- Endocarditis on normal valves - acute course
- Endocarditis on abnormal valves - subacute course
What is the pathophysiology of infective endocarditis?
- Bacteraemia (or fungi, SLE, malignancy)
- Microorganisms adhere to endocardium & valve
- Microorganism grows and multiplys
- Forms a fibrin-platelet vegetation
- Fibrin thrombosis → embolization
- Calcification of valves → destruction
What are the risk factors for infective endocarditis?
- Previous IE
- Valves with congenital/ acquired disease or prosthetics
- CV disease, especially
- IV drug use
- Immunosuppressed patients
- Indwelling IV catheter
- Rheumatic heart disease
What are the main causes of infective endocarditis?
Outline the course & chief cause of acute & subacute IE?
Causes;
- Bacteraemia; Strep. viridans and Staph. aureus
- Fungi, SLE (Libman-Sacks endocarditis) & malignancy
Acute (on normal valves);
- Acute HF +/- emboli
- Staph. aureus
Subacute (on abnormal valves);
- Between acute & chronic
- Any valve abnormality
What are the signs of infective endocarditis?
SECI - Septic, Embolic, Cardiac, Immunological
Septic signs;
- Fever, rigors, night sweats, malaise, weight loss, anaemia, splenomegaly, clubbing
- Can cause sepsis
Embolic phenomena;
- Emboli break off
Cardiac lesions;
- Any new murmur, regurgitation (vegetations destroy valve), valve obstruction
- Long PR interval (aortic root abscess)
- May lead to AV block
- LVF
Immune complex deposition;
- Vasculitis
- Microscopic haematuria, GN, acute renal failure
- Roth spots (boat shaped retinal haemorrhage with pale centre)
- Oslers nodes (painful pulp infarcts in fingers/toes due to clots)
- Janeway lesions (painless palmer or plantar macules)
- Splinter haemorrhages (small clots)
How would you investigate and diagnose infective endocarditis?
Duke criteria;
Major;
- Positive blood culture;
- Typical organism in 2 separate culures or
- Persistently +ve blood cultures (3 >12hrs apart)
- Endocardium involved;
- Positive echocardiogram (vegetation, abscess, dehiscence of prosthetic valve)
- New valvular regurg (chang in murmur not sufficient)
Minor;
- Predisposition (cardiac lesion; IV drug abuse)
- Fever >38C
- Vascular/ immunological signs
- Positive blood culture that doesnt meet major criteria
- Positive echocardiogram that does not meet major criteria
Requires 2 major, 1 major/ 3 minor, 5 minor
- FBC & differential WCC
- ESR
- CRP
- Complement C3, C4, CH50
- ECG, look for conduction defects
- Urinalysis (protein & microscopic haematuria)
- Echocardiogram (normal does not exclude)
How would you treat IE?
- Antibiotics
- Surgery for destructed valve
- Prevent complications; warfarin