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Infective Endocarditis

Infective Endocarditis. Goals for Today. Recognize the risk factors, signs, and symptoms of infectious endocarditis. Understand the many approaches to diagnosing infectious endocarditis. Appreciate the necessity of rapid treatment. Anticipate possible complications.

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Infective Endocarditis

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  1. Infective Endocarditis

  2. Goals for Today • Recognize the risk factors, signs, and symptoms of infectious endocarditis. • Understand the many approaches to diagnosing infectious endocarditis. • Appreciate the necessity of rapid treatment. • Anticipate possible complications. • Bring it all together with an actual patient case!

  3. Definition • Infectious Endocarditis (IE): an infection of the heart’s endocardial surface • Classified into four groups: • Native Valve IE • Prosthetic Valve IE • Intravenous drug abuse (IVDA) IE • Nosocomial IE

  4. Further Classification • Subacute • Often affects damaged heart valves • Indolent nature • If not treated, usually fatal by one year • Acute • Affects normal heart valves • Rapidly destructive • Metastatic foci • Commonly Staph. • If not treated, usually fatal within 6 weeks

  5. Pathophysiology • Turbulent blood flow disrupts the endocardium making it “sticky” • Bacteremia delivers the organisms to the endocardial surface • Adherence of the organisms to the endocardial surface • Eventual invasion of the valvular leaflets

  6. Epidemiology • Incidence difficult to ascertain and varies according to location • Much more common in males than in females • May occur in persons of any age and increasingly common in elderly • Mortality ranges from 20-30%

  7. Risk Factors • Intravenous drug abuse • Artificial heart valves and pacemakers • Acquired heart defects • Calcific aortic stenosis • Mitral valve prolapse with regurgitation • Congenital heart defects • Intravascular catheters

  8. Infecting Organisms • Common bacteria • S. aureus • Streptococci • Enterococci • Not so common bacteria • Fungi • Pseudomonas • HACEK

  9. Symptoms • Subacute • Low grade fever • Anorexia • Weight loss • Fatigue • Arthralgias/ myalgias • Abdominal pain • N/V • Acute • High grade fever and chills • SOB • Arthralgias/ myalgias • Abdominal pain • Pleuritic chest pain • Back pain The onset of symptoms is usually ~2 weeks or less from the initiating bacteremia

  10. Signs • Fever • Heart murmur • Nonspecific signs – petechiae, subungal or “splinter” hemorrhages, clubbing, splenomegaly, neurologic changes • More specific signs - Osler’s Nodes, Janeway lesions, and Roth Spots

  11. Petechiae • Nonspecific • Often located on extremities • or mucous membranes dermatology.about.com/.../ blpetechiaephoto.htm Harden Library for the Health Sciences www.lib.uiowa.edu/ hardin/ md/cdc/3184.html Photo credit, Josh Fierer, M.D. medicine.ucsd.edu/clinicalimg/ Eye-Petechiae.html

  12. Splinter Hemorrhages • Nonspecific • Nonblanching • Linear reddish-brown lesions found under the nail bed • Usually do NOT extend the entire length of the nail

  13. Osler’s Nodes American College of Rheumatology webrheum.bham.ac.uk/.../ default/pages/3b5.htm www.meddean.luc.edu/.../ Hand10/Hand10dx.html • More specific • Painful and erythematous nodules • Located on pulp of fingers and toes • More common in subacute IE

  14. Janeway Lesions • More specific • Erythematous, blanching macules • Nonpainful • Located on palms and soles

  15. TheEssentialBlood Test • Blood Cultures • Minimum of three blood cultures1 • Three separate venipuncture sites • Obtain 10-20mL in adults and 0.5-5mL in children2 • Positive Result • Typical organisms present in at least 2 separate samples • Persistently positive blood culture (atypical organisms) • Two positive blood cultures obtained at least 12 hours apart • Three or a more positive blood cultures in which the first and last samples were collected at least one hour apart

  16. Additional Labs • CBC • ESR and CRP • Complement levels (C3, C4, CH50) • RF • Urinalysis • Baseline chemistries and coags

  17. Imaging • Chest x-ray • Look for multiple focal infiltrates and calcification of heart valves • EKG • Rarely diagnostic • Look for evidence of ischemia, conduction delay, and arrhythmias • Echocardiography

  18. Indications for Echocardiography • Transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) • First line if suspected IE • Native valves • Transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) • Prosthetic valves • Intracardiac complications • Inadequate TTE • Fungal or S. aureus or bacteremia

  19. Making the Diagnosis • Pelletier and Petersdorf criteria (1977) • Classification scheme of definite, probable, and possible IE • Reasonably specific but lacked sensitivity • Von Reyn criteria (1981) • Added “rejected” as a category • Added more clinical criteria • Improved specificity and clinical utility • Duke criteria (1994) • Included the role of echocardiography in diagnosis • Added IVDA as a “predisposing heart condition”

  20. Modified Duke Criteria • Definite IE • Microorganism (via culture or histology) in a valvular vegetation, embolized vegetation, or intracardiac abscess • Histologic evidence of vegetation or intracardiac abscess • Possible IE • 2 major • 1 major and 3 minor • 5 minor • Rejected IE • Resolution of illness with four days or less of antibiotics

  21. Treatment • Parenteral antibiotics • High serum concentrations to penetrate vegetations • Prolonged treatment to kill dormant bacteria clustered in vegetations • Surgery • Intracardiac complications • Surveillance blood cultures

  22. Complications • Four etiologies • Embolic • Local spread of infection • Metastatic spread of infection • Formation of immune complexes – glomerulonephritis and arthritis

  23. Embolic Complications • Occur in up to 40% of patients with IE • Predictors of embolization • Size of vegetation • Left-sided vegetations • Fungal pathogens, S. aureus, and Strep. Bovis • Incidence decreases significantly after initiation of effective antibiotics

  24. Embolic Complications • Stroke • Myocardial Infarction • Fragments of valvular vegetation or vegetation-induced stenosis of coronary ostia • Ischemic limbs • Hypoxia from pulmonary emboli • Abdominal pain (splenic or renal infarction)

  25. Septic Pulmonary Emboli http://www.emedicine.com/emerg/topic164.htm

  26. Septic Retinal Embolus

  27. Local Spread of Infection • Heart failure • Extensive valvular damage • Paravalvular abscess (30-40%) • Most common in aortic valve, IVDA, and S. aureus • May extend into adjacent conduction tissue causing arrythmias • Higher rates of embolization and mortality • Pericarditis • Fistulous intracardiac connections

  28. Local Spread of Infection Acute S. aureus IE with perforation of the aortic valve and aortic valve vegetations. Acute S. aureus IE with mitral valve ring abscess extending into myocardium.

  29. Metastatic Spread of Infection • Metastatic abscess • Kidneys, spleen, brain, soft tissues • Meningitis and/or encephalitis • Vertebral osteomyelitis • Septic arthritis

  30. Poor Prognostic Factors • Diabetes mellitus • Low serum albumen • Apache II score • Heart failure • Paravalvular abscess • Embolic events • Female • S. aureus • Vegetation size • Aortic valve • Prosthetic valve • Older age

  31. What do these patients have in common? • Pt. A: 65 y/o female with PMH of esophageal cancer who presents to clinic with deyhdration, cough, SOB, and “oozing” near her mediport site. • Pt. B: 30 y/o male IVDA with a several weeks of fatigue and low grade fevers. • Pt. C: 24 y/o female IVDA with severe N/V/abd pain and fevers up to 104 for two weeks. Pt also c/o cough with DOE.

  32. All these patients have MRSA endocarditis!

  33. Patients A, B, and C • Try to classify each patient’s IE. • Which of these patients likely has acute IE? Which has subacute IE? • What was the likely etiology of each patient’s bacteremia?

  34. Patient C: History • 2 wks of high fever, cough, green sputum, and DOE. • 2 wks of N/V (5x/day), diarrhea (20x/day), and diffuse abdominal pain. • Diagnosed with PNA after a (-) LP and (+) CXR and an outside ER. Given PO abx but didn’t fill Rx. • Last IVDA 3 wks ago.

  35. Patient C:History • Which symptoms does Patient C have that suggest IE? • Does Patient C have any symptoms you can’t explain?

  36. Patient C:Exam • Vitals: T104.7, BP 100/50, HR 130, RR 48, 94% on 3L FM • Pale, distressed • Petechia to palate, dry mucus membranes • 2/6 SEM at 4th intercostal space with radiation to axilla • Diffuse wheezing and crackles • Diffuse abdominal pain and right flank pain without rebound or guarding • Multiple track marks, otherwise neg. skin exam

  37. Patient C:Exam • Which signs does Patient C exhibit that suggest IE? • Does Patient C have any signs you can’t explain?

  38. Patient C:Labs • WBC 20, H/H of 9/27, Platelets 66 • pH 7.45, pO2 54, pCO2 27 • Albumen 1.7 • UA: 2+ protein,3+ blood • EKG: WNL except sinus tachycardia • CXR: enlarged right heart, bilateral infiltrates with nodularity • Chest CT: multiple pulmonary abscesses

  39. Patient C:Labs • Can you explain these results? • Are there other lab values you would like to know?

  40. Patient C: Diagnosis • Blood Cx: three out of three bottles grew MRSA. • Initial TTE: tricuspid valve not well visualized but severe regurg. with PA systolic pressure of 55 mmHg. • Repeat TTE (~2 wks after coding!): oscillating masson at least two leaflets of tricuspid valve that prolapse into R atrium during systole as well as thickened pulmonary valve with possible vegetation.

  41. Patient C:Diagnosis • What major Duke criteria does Patient C meet? • What minor Duke criteria does Patient C meet?

  42. Patient C:Today • s/p chest tube with removal • 2 separate episodes of respiratory failure with intubation (now extubated) • 1 episode of V. fib with cardioversion and a lidocaine gtt. (now weaned off after 1 episode of lidocaine toxicity) • CT surgery evaluated the pt and felt she wasn’t a surgical candidate. • She is currently still requiring 3L oxygen and c/o N/V and SOB on telemetry.

  43. Summary • IVDA and the elderly are at greatest risk of developing IE. • The signs and symptoms of IE are nonspecific and varied. • A thorough but timely evaluation (including serial blood cultures, adjunct labs, and an echo) is crucial to accurately diagnose and treat IE. • Beware of life-threatening complications.

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