Endocarditis

Chapter 33 Endocarditis





1 What are the important clinical manifestations of endocarditis?


Several processes contribute to the clinical signs and symptoms of infective endocarditis, including valvular involvement with intracardiac complications, high-grade and persistent bacteremia (which may lead to metastatic foci), bland or septic embolization to any organ, and immune complex formation. Fever occurs in 80% of patients, and nonspecific symptoms, including anorexia, weight loss, malaise, fatigue, chills, weakness, nausea, vomiting, and night sweats, are very common. Although heart murmurs are common, the so-called changing murmur is relatively uncommon.


The incidence of peripheral manifestations has decreased. Osler nodes, although not specific for endocarditis, may occur in 10% to 25% of all cases and are generally seen in subacute cases. Janeway lesions (i.e., macular, painless plaques on the palms and soles) are seen in fewer than 10% of cases. Clubbing may be seen if the disease is long-standing and may occur 10% to 20% of the time. Splenomegaly occurs in 25% to 60% of cases, generally those with subacute disease. Joint complaints may occur in approximately 40% of patients and may be relatively innocuous with low back pain or myalgias and arthralgias. Musculoskeletal symptoms may also be quite severe, including frank septic arthritis and severe low back pain. Other less common musculoskeletal manifestations include septic bursitis, sacroiliitis, septic diskitis, and polymyalgia rheumatica. Long-standing subacute endocarditis may present as chronic wasting syndrome mimicking cancer or human immunodeficiency virus infection. Signs and symptoms of embolic episodes are determined by the location of the embolism. Patients with splenic emboli may have left upper quadrant pain, left-sided pleural effusions, or a rub. Renal infarction from a septic embolus may present as flank pain and hematuria. Immune complex formation may lead to renal insufficiency. Cough and shortness of breath with chest pain often accompany pulmonary emboli. Coronary emboli occur rarely and may present with myocarditis, arrhythmias, myocardial infarction, or a combination thereof. Extension into the pericardial space may lead to purulent pericarditis with severe chest pain and hemodynamic compromise. Unexplained heart failure in a young patient without prior cardiac disease should prompt an investigation for infectious endocarditis.




3 What are the Duke criteria for the diagnosis of endocarditis? How have they been modified?


The original Duke criteria for the diagnosis of infective endocarditis stratified patients into three categories:




Box 33-1 Original duke pathologic and clinical criteria for diagnosis of endocarditis




Clinical Criteria


Clinical criteria include either two major criteria or one major and three minor criteria or five minor criteria from the following list:


Major criteria are the following:



Minor criteria are the following:



Since the original Duke criteria were published in 1994, several refinements have been made based on studies evaluating the sensitivity and specificity of the criteria:




Jul 7, 2016 | Posted by in CRITICAL CARE | Comments Off on Endocarditis

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