Infective Endocarditis Flashcards

1
Q

what are the predisposing factors to infective endocarditis?

A
o	Heart valve abnormality
o	Prosthetic heart valve
o	IV drug user
o	IV lines
o	Recent Dental treatment
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2
Q

what are the common causative organisms of infective endocarditis?

A

o Staphylococcus aureus (38%)
o Viridans group streptococci (31%)
o Enterococcus sp (8%)
o Staphylococcus epidermidis

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3
Q

what are the atypical organisms associated with infective endocarditis?

A

• Bartonella, Coxiella burnetii (Q-fever), Chlamydia, Legionella, Mycoplasma, Brucella

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4
Q

what are the gram negative organisms associated with infective endocarditis?

A

HACEK organisms - Haemophilus spp. , Aggregatibacter spp, ( was Actinobacillus) , Cardiobacterium, Eikenella sp., Kingella sp.
Non HACEK gram negatives

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5
Q

what is the pathophysiology of infective endocarditis?

A

Heart valve damaged, turbulent blood flow leads to platelets/fibrin thrombus, bacteraemia results in organisms settling in thrombi, infective vegetations are friable and break off lodging in capillaries

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6
Q

what are the two ways in which infective endocarditis presents?

A

subacute or sepsis/HF

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7
Q

what are the clinical features of infective endocarditis?

A

Fever, malaise, Weight loss, Tiredness, Breathlessness, New or changing heart murmur, finger clubbing, splinter haemorrhages, splenomegaly, Roth spots, Janeway lesions, Osler nodes, microscopic haematuria

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8
Q

what criteria is used in infective endocarditis?

A

Dukes

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9
Q

what are major criteria of Dukes criteria?

A

Two separate posistive blood cultures with microorganism(s) typical for infective endocarditis: Viridans streptococci, Streptococcus bocis, HACEK group, Staphylococcus aureus, community acquired enterococci
Echocardiographic evidence of endocardial involvement - Typical valvular lesions: vegetation, abscess, or new partial dehiscence of a prosthetic valve
New valvular regurgitation

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10
Q

what are the minor criteria of Dukes criteria?

A

Predisposition: predisposing heart condition or IV drug use
Temperature greater than 38C
Vascular phenomena - Major areterial emboli, septic pulmonary infarcts, mycotic aneurysm, intracranial haemorrhage, conjunctival haemorrhage, Janeway lesions
Immunological phenomena - Glomerulonephritis, Osler nodes, Roth spots, rheumatoid factor
Microbiological Evidence - Positive blood culture but not meeting major criterion, or serological evidence of active infection with organisms consistent with infective endocarditis

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11
Q

What Dukes criteria is required for definitive IE?

A

2 main criteria
1 main and 3 secondary
5 minor criteria

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12
Q

What Dukes criteria is needed for possible IE?

A

1 main and 1 secondary

3 minor criteria

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13
Q

which main investigation is needed for IE?

A

blood cultures - 3 sets

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14
Q

what is the diagnostic criteria for blood cultures in IE?

A

o Detection of endocarditis-specific pathogens in 2 independent blood cultures
o Microorganisms compatible with an IE in persistently posistive blood cultures: at least 2 posistive blood cultures from blood withdrawals at least 12 hours apart pr each of 2 or a pluraility of > 4 separate blood cultures (first and last sample taken at least 1hr apart)
o A single positive blood culture with Coxiella Burnetii or a Phase 1 IgG antibody titer> 1:800

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15
Q

What will the features of an echo show in IE?

A

o Posistive echocardiography for an IE: vegtation, abscess, pseudoaneurysm, intracardiac fistula, valve perforation, new partial dehiscence of a valve prosthesis
o Abnormal heart valve prosthetic activity detected with F-FDG-PET/ CT (only > 3months after valve implantation) or SPECT / CT with radiolabelled leukocytes
o Paravalvular lesions in cardiac CT

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16
Q

what other investigations should be done in IE?

A

blood tests, urinalysis, CXR, ECG, Echo

17
Q

what is the management of Native valve indolent (Subacute) IE?

A

Amoxicillin IV 2g 4 hourly + Gentamicin 1mg/kg bd (use actual body weight - max 120mg/dose)

18
Q

what is the management of Native valve Sepsis (Acute) IE?

A

Flucloxacillin IV 2g 6 hourly (4 hourly if >85kg)

19
Q

what is the management of Prosthetic valve or Suspected MRSA IE?

A

Vancomycin IV + Gentamicin IV 1mg/kg bd (use actual body weight - max 120mg/dose + when therapeutic vancomycin levels reached add Rifampicin PO 600mg bd (always check for interactions)

20
Q

what is the management of drug user endocarditis (MSSA) IE?

A

Flucloxacillin IV

21
Q

what is the management of Staphylococcus aureus (not MSSA) IE?

A

Flucloxacillin IV

22
Q

what is the management of Viridans IE?

A

Benzylpenicillin iv & gentamicin iv (synergistic)

23
Q

what is the management of Enterococcus sp. IE?

A

Amoxicillin/ vancomycin & gentamicin IV

24
Q

what is the management of Staphylococcus epidermis IE?

A

Vancomycin & gentamicin IV & rifampicin PO

25
Q

what is the management of MRSA IE?

A

as per prosthetic valve

26
Q

how should management be monitored in IE?

A

o IV antibiotics usually given for 4 - 6 weeks
o Monitor cardiac function, temperature and serum C-reactive protein (CRP)
o If failing on antibiotic therapy, consider referral for surgery early