Infective endocarditis Flashcards
Define:
Infection of the intracardiac structures mainly the heart valves
Aetiology:
Mainly strep cocci and aureus
But many other infective organisms
Cause vegetations (deposition of fibrin, platelets and infective organism in times of bacteriemia) which destroy valve leaflets
also can get Libman endocarditis with SLE
Risk factors:
IV drug use
recent dental work or poor dental hygiene
prosthetic or abnormal valves
DM
post op wounds
turbulent flow like patent ductus arterisosus
renal failure
Epidemiology:
16-22/1 million per year in the UK
Symptoms:
FEVER
malaise
weight loss
arthralgia/ myalgia
confusion
skin lesions
Signs:
FROM JANE C
pyrexia
new murmur (likely to be LHS)
Janeway lesions - due to emboli deposition
due to immune complex deposition:
- osler nodes
- splinter hameorrhages
- glomerularnephritis
- Roth spots on retina
- Petechiae on pharyngeal and conjunctival mucosa
tachycardia
clubbing
signs of anaemia
Investigations:
• Bloods o FBC - high neutrophils, normocytic anaemia o High ESR/CRP o U&Es o May be Rheumatoid factor +ve o LFTs
Urinalysis
o Microscopic haematuria
o Proteinuria
Blood Culture
o Do 3 sets at different times from different sites are peak of fever
CXR – cardiomegaly
ECG – long PR interval at regular intervals
Echocardiography
o May show vegetation but only if >2mm
Duke’s Classification - a method of diagnosing infective endocarditis based on the findings of the investigations and the symptoms/signs
Complications:
- Valve incompetence
- Intracardiac fistulae or abscesses
- Aneurysm
- Heart failure
- Renal failure
- Glomerulonephritis
- Arterial emboli from the vegetations shooting to the brain, kidneys, lungs and spleen
management:
- Antibiotics for 4-6 weeks
- Blind therapy of native valve: amoxicillin +/- gentamicin
- Blind therapy or prosthetic valve: vancomycin + gentamycin + rifampicin
• On clinical suspicion = EMPIRICAL TREATMENT
o Benzylpenicillin
o Gentamicin
• SURGERY - urgent valve replacement may be needed if there is a poor response to antibiotics
prognosis:
fatal if untreated
15-30% mortality with treatment