Infective Endocarditis Flashcards
What is infective endocarditis?
Inflammation of the inner tissues of the heart (endocardium), often the valves, caused by an infective cause
What factors put patients at risk of developing infective endocarditis?
i.v. drug use indwelling cardiac devices valvular disease/replacement structural heart disease previous IE hypertrophic cardiomyopathy invasive vascular procedures
What is the classical presentation of infective endocarditis?
Acute febrile illness w/ new murmur
CAN BE INSIDIOUS (malaise, anorexia, lethargy, arthralgia)
What are the common causative organisms of infective endocarditis?
Strep viridans Staph aureus Strep epidermis Pseudomonas aeruginosa Fungi (subacute) Enterococci HACEK organisms
What are the HACEK organisms?
Gram -ve bacteria causing endocarditis Haemophilius Actinobacillus Cardiobacterium Eikenella Kingella
What morphological changes are seen on affected heart valves?
Formation of infective lesions along edges of heart valves (vegetations)
Ulceration results in erosion/perforation of valve cusps
Causes valvular incompetence
Describe acute infective endocarditis
Mostly occurs on normal valves
Acute heart failure and emboli
S. aureus
Mortality 5-50%
Describe subacute infective endocarditis
Mostly occurs on abnormal valves
Insidious onset
Caused by normal GI/skin commensals
Similar mortality
What valves are most commonly affected by IE?
Mitral Aortic -combined mitral/aortic Tricuspid Pulmonary (v. rare)
What are the complications of infective endocarditis?
Valve destruction - heart failure
Embolic disease
Glomerulonephritis
Describe valve destruction leading to heart failure
Damage to heart valves due to infective lesions/ulceration
Regurgitation/blockage leads to build up of pressure - heart failure
Describe embolic disease
Septic embolus - infection of one part of the body that migrates to the other
Causes any problems associated with emboli AND causes infection
Causes abscesses in organs
Describe Glomerulonephritis
Inflammation within the glomerulus caused by immune complex deposition
-decreased blood flow
-loss of filtration
Causes nephrotic/nephritic syndrome
What investigations should be performed when infective endocarditis is suspected?
Blood cultures - 3 sets, different times, peak of fever (90% +ve)
Echocardiography - visualisation of valves/lesions
FBC - anaemias, WCC
ESR/CRP - sign of infection/inflammation
U&E - renal damage?
Renal function tests - urinalysis, eGFR, creatinine
What is Duke’s criteria?
Measure of major/minor criteria suggesting IE
-2 major OR 1 major + 3 minor