Endocarditis Flashcards
What causes bicuspid aortic valves (should be tricuspid)?
=Congenital
Abnormal aortic cusp formation during valvogenesis
Conjoined cusp
Why are patients with a bicuspid valve at a higher risk of developing endocarditis?
Abnormal blood flow over valve
Abnormal valve tissue
Patient= at greater risk of microbes in blood sticking to valve cusp
What are the 2 main risk factors for endocarditis?
- Structural defects (endocardium= non sticky and normally resistant to bacterial seeding)
- Injectable drug use
What is the mechanism for infection of endocarditis?
Vegetation formation
–> binds to valves/mural endocardium
Aberrant blood flow- cllection of fibrin. platelets and scant inflammatory cells
eg Staph aureus has fibronectin binding proteins–> binds to intact endothelium
Why can endocarditis be difficult to treat?
Micro colonies of bacteria remain dormant
Colonies tend to embolise- causing sepsis and reinfection og vegetation
What are the 3 hallmarks of infection?
- Constitutional symptoms= cytokine mediated
- Local spread of infection- destruction of myocardium
- Distal blood borneseptic embolisation
What are the clinical features of endocarditis?
- Fever
- Heart murmur
- Other cardiac complications
- Embolic features
- eg Janeway lesions (haemorrhagic nodular lesions with irregular border- micro-absess formation and loaclised necrosis
What are splinter haemorrhages?
What are Roth spots in the eye
What are Oslers nodes?
Painful, erythmatous nodules on pads of fingers and toes