Infective Endocarditis Flashcards

1
Q

What is infective endocarditis?

A

Infection of endocardium - valves, septal defects, mural endocardium

95% involves left heart - Mitral and Aortic valve
IVDU more frequently right heart

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2
Q

Classification of IE

A
  1. Native valve endocarditis
    - SA: affects all valves equally
    - S. viridans: affects abnormal valves
    - Presence of insults: RHD, congenital, MVP, degenerative valve
  2. Prosthetic valve endocarditis
    - Early (within 60 days of replacement)
    - Late (similar to native endocarditis)
  3. Right sided endocarditis (IVDU)
    - Usually Tricuspid valve, less aortic valve
    - SA, MRSA, fungi, strep, GNB
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3
Q

Osler Nodes and Janeway Lesions

A

Osler Nodes
- tender papules
- pulps of fingers and toes, thenar and hypothenar eminences
-> deposition of immune complexes

Janeway lesions
- non tender hemorrhage
- palms and soles
-> septic microembolisms

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4
Q

Duke Criteria

A

2 Major
1 Major 3 Minor
5 Minor

Major:
1. positive blood culture x2 or persistent
2. positive echocardiogram or new valvular regurgitation
- Vegetations, abscess, valve perf, dehiscence

Minor:
1. Predisposing: heart condition, IVDU
2. Fever > 38 degree
3. Vascular phenomenon: major arterial emboli, septic pulmonary infarcts, mycotic aneurysm, ICH, conjunctival hemorrhage, Janeway lesions
4. Immunologic phenomenon: GN, Osler nodes, Roth spot (RH), rheumatoid factor
5. Positive blood culture but not meeting major criteria
6. Positive echocardiogram but not meeting major criteria

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5
Q

Antibiotics prophylaxis for IE before surgery

A

Given for dental, respiratory, gastrointestinal and genitourinary procedures

Amoxicillin 2g, 1 hour before procedure or

Clindamycin 600mg
Azithromycin 500mg
Clarithromycin 500mg

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6
Q

What are the typical organisms involved in IE?

A

Strep and staph
- Streptococcus viridans
- Streptococcus bovis (a/w colorectal cancer)
- Enterococci
- Staphylococcus aureus (a/w IVD users)
- Staphylococcus epidermidis (prosthetic valve)

HACEK
- Haemophilus
- Actinobacillus
- Cardiobacterium
- Eikenella
- Kingella

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7
Q

How do you investigate for IE?

A
  1. FBC: anaemia (HA), leukocytosis with neutrophilia
  2. ESR, CRP
  3. Blood culture
  4. TTE
  5. CXR
  6. ECG
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8
Q

How do you treat infective endocarditis?

A
  1. General measures - oxygen, supportive
  2. Antibiotics tailored to culture and sensitivity
  3. Surgery if indicated -> see indications for surgery
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9
Q

What are the indications for surgery in IE?

A
  1. Heart failure
  2. Failure of medical therapy
    - Persistent fever, inflammatory syndrome after 1 week of appropriate and adequate anbitiotics
    - Mobile vegetation > 10mm with 1 major embolism
    - Mobile vegetation > 15mm
  3. Valvular complications: abscess, obstruction, rupture into pericardium, septal formation, fistula
  4. Fungal endocarditis
  5. Prosthetic valve, especially unstable or early, caused by SA
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10
Q

What is the prognosis of IE?

A

Dependent on undelying cause
- 30% staphylococci
- 14% enterococcus
- 50% if prosthetic valve
- MVP - 5 year death rate 22-33%

Survivability >70% with endogenous infection, 50% with prosthetic valve infection

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11
Q

What is non-infective endocarditis?
(Libman-Sacks endocarditis)

A

Sterile vegetation in SLE or ALPS, not along lines of valve closure
Usually postmortem finding
(Rare due to advent of steroid therapy)

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12
Q

Pathogenesis of IE

A

Predisposing
- Blood flow derangement from underlying abnormality
- Increased trauma to endocardial surface
- Formation of sterile platelet-fibrin deposits

Precipitating
- Seeding of organisms during bacteraemia
> IVD, dental or surgical procedure, occult source (brushing teeth), bacteria clumps from agglutinating antibodies

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13
Q

What are the complications of IE?

A
  1. Valve destruction, obstruction or regurgitation
  2. Heart failure
  3. Infection extension -> ring abscess
  4. Conduction defect
  5. Thromboembolism - brain, kidney, lungs, spleen, bowel
  6. Mycotic aneurysm
  7. Distal organ seeding - cerebral abscess
  8. Glomerulonephritis (deposition of immune complexes and complement activation)
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