Lecture 21: Infective endocarditis Flashcards

1
Q

What are indications for endocarditis?

A
  • Symptoms and signs of infection
  • Embolic phenomena
  • Abnormal heart valve

= Endocarditis

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2
Q

What are the signs and symptoms of endocarditis?

A
  • Fever
  • Splinter haemorrhages
  • Early diastolic murmur
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3
Q

Describe endocarditis pathogenesis:

A

Turbulent flow through abnormal valve, due to congenital abnormality, nodules from rheumatic heart disease
->
Platelets and fibrin attach to damaged valvular epithelium forming sterile vegetations
->
Transient bacteraemia arising from mouth, skin, gut, urinary tract, etc, seeds bacteria onto sterile vegetations
->
Infected vegetation enlarges and sheds infected emboli and leads to valvular destruction

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4
Q

Describe the flow diagram of endocarditis

A

Insert slide 9

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5
Q

Whats the diagnosis methods of endocarditis?

A
  • > Continuous bacteraemia (on 3 blood cultures 20 mins apart) or culture excised valve)
  • > High concentration of bacteria in and on vegetation, with bacteria continually shed from vegetation into blood

= Organism identified in about 95% cases

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6
Q

What are the three types of bacteraemia?

A

True, contaminant, transient

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7
Q

What is true bacteraemia?

A
  • Pathogen cultured
  • Sometimes more than one set of blood cultures positive
  • Clinically compatible infective source identifed
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8
Q

What is contaminant bacteraemia?

A
  • Skin commensal cultured
  • Only one set of blood cultures positive
  • no apparent infective source
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9
Q

What is transient bacteraemia?

A
  • Gut or mouth organism cultured
  • Blood cultures only positive briefly
  • No apparent infective source
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10
Q

Whats the treatment of infective endocarditis?

A
  • Infection of heart valves is never cured by host defenses - universally fatal without effective antibiotic treatment

Bactericidal antibiotic treatment for weeks

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11
Q

What mainly causes endocarditis?

A

Viridans streptococci

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12
Q

Once a microbial is identified what is the importance of antibiotic susceptibility testing?

A

Need to test the bacteria to determine minimum inhibitory concentration distribution to determine dosage of antibiotic

I.e minimum inhib concentration to kill viridans streptococci

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13
Q

What is MIC of penicillin? - viridans streptococci

A

Most strains of viridans streptococci are inhibited by concentrations of penicillin that are readily achieved in serum with IV treatment

but, minority of strains of viridans streptococci are inhibited by slightly higher concentrations that cannot be readably achieved with IV treatment

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14
Q

What is MIC of penicillin? - staphylococci aureus

A

Minority strains of staphylococcus aureusare inhibited by concentrations of penicillin that are readily achieved in serum with IV treatment

but, majority of strains of staphylococcus aureus are inhibited by slightly higher concentrations that cannot be readably achieved with IV treatment

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15
Q

What is bacteriastatic vs bacteriacidal? Whats the consideration of vegetations and treatment?

A

Use a bactericidal drug or drug combination - because neutrophils have difficulty entering vegetations

Bacteristatic antibiotics: Erythromycin, doxycycline, etc (host defenses do the rest, no function in this case because of difficulty)

Bacteriacidal Antibiotic: I.e penicillin, cephalosporin

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16
Q

What is the endocarditis treatment?

A
Antibiotic: Dependent on organism
Method: IV
Dose: Always high dose
Duration: Usually 2 weeks, often 4
Cure rate: 70-90%
17
Q

How is endocarditis prevented?

A

Reduced risk of bacteraemia in persons known to have abnormal heart valves

i.e antibiotic prophylaxis at time of dental work (lol this doesnt help)

Usually give only one dose of penicillin

18
Q

Describe rheumatic pathogenesis and note how this is different to infective endocarditis?

A

Pharyngitis due to strep. pyogenes -> Immune responses to GAS throat infection -> Inflammation of joints, heart valves, skin, brain

19
Q

How is rheumatic fever diagnosed?

A

Inflammation (not infection) of heart, joints, skin, brain

Fever

Raised ESR and CRP

S. pyogenes isolated from throat

Antibody responses to s. pyogenes

20
Q

Compare and contrast ARF and endocarditis:

A

ARF: S. pyogenes only -> immunological damage to valve

Endocarditis: Viridans streptococci + Others -> infects valves -> vegetations (pre-existing?)

21
Q

Insert slide 35

A

now