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Update on Infective Endocarditis Larry Baddour, MD University of Tennessee 7/98 medslides.com 1 Pathogenesis • Disruption of the endocardial layer as a complication of abnormal blood flow associated with underlying cardiac defect • Bacterium-endothelium interaction with bacterial attachment and invasion of endothelial cells 7/98 medslides.com 2 Epidemiology • Underlying valvular abnormality predisposing to infective endocarditis – rheumatic fever a common cause in the past – mitral valve prolapse currently represents the most common underlying cardiac abnormality 7/98 medslides.com 3 mitral valve prolapse • risk for infective ednocarditis is 5x-8x • mitral regurgitation increases the risk • leaflet redundancy with myxomatous degeneration is a frequent finding • age <20 , female predominate age >20 , male accounts for 60% age >50 , male accounts for 68% 7/98 medslides.com 4 Mitral Valve Prolapse and Infective Endocarditis 20 18 16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 Male Female <19 7/98 20-29 30-39 40-49 Rev Infect Dis 1986;8:117-137 50-59 >60 medslides.com 5 Coagulase-negative Staphylococci • can produce native-valve endocarditis in mitral valve prolapse • usually subacute, difficult to diagnose, and disregarded as a contaminant • delay in diagnosis and treatment may account for the severe complications – myocardial abscess formation – valvular insufficiency requiring valve surgery – death 7/98 medslides.com 6 Prosthetic Heart Valve • positive blood culture in hospitalized patients with underlying prosthetic valves can be a harbinger of endocarditis • 43% patients with nosocomial bacteremia or fungemia had prosthetic valve infection • a serious complication 7/98 medslides.com 7 IV Drug Use • Recurrent • Polymicrobial • Staph aureus accounts for the majority of cases of endocarditis • tricuspid valve, either alone or in combination, us most often infected 7/98 medslides.com 8 Predisposing Factors Polymicrobial Infective Endocarditis Iv drug use Central line Prosthetic valve Previous IE Murmur Dental procedure Rheumatic disease Miscellaneous 7/98 medslides.com 9 Polymicrobial Infective Endocarditis clinical features • • • • • • • IV drug use is the predominant risk factor younger age (mean 36.5 years) 2/3 were male right-sided cardiac involvement in > 60% streptococci more frequent than S. aureus 1/3 of patients died mortality rate is 4x higher for pure leftsides vs pure right-sided endocarditis 7/98 medslides.com 10 Diagnostic (Duke) Criteria • Definitive infective endocarditis – pathologic criteria • microorganisms or pathologic lesions: demonstrated by culture or histology in a vegetation, or in a vegetation that has embolized, or in an intracardiac abscess – clinical criteria (see below) • two major criteria, or one major and three minor criteria, or five minor criteria 7/98 medslides.com 11 Diagnostic (Duke) Criteria • Possible infective endocarditis – findings consistent of IE that fall short of “definite”, but not “rejected” • Rejected – firm alternate Dx for manifestation of IE – resolution ofmanifestations of IE, with antibiotic therapy for 4 days – no pathologic evidence of IE at surgery or autopsy, after antibiotic therapy for 4 days 7/98 medslides.com 12 Diagnostic (Duke) Criteria • Major criteria – positive blood culture for IE – evidence of endocardial involvement • Minor criteria – – – – 7/98 predisposition (heart condition or IV drug use) fever of 100.40F or higher vascular or immunologic phenomena microbiologic or echocardiographic evidence not meeting major criteria medslides.com 13 Duke’s Major Criteria • positive blood culture for IE – typical microorganism (strep viridans, strep bovis, HACEK group, staph aureus or enterococci in the absence of a primary locus) for endocarditis from two separate blood cultures – persistently positive blood culture from: • blood cultures drawn more than 12 hr apart, or • all of 3 or a majority of 4 or more separate blood cultures, with first and last drqwn at least 1 hr apart 7/98 medslides.com 14 Duke’s Major Criteria • Evidence of endocardial involvement – positive echocardiogram for endocarditis • oscillating intracardiac mass on valve or supporting structure, or in the path of regurgitant jets, or on implanted material, in the absence of an alternate anatomic explanation • abscess • new partial dehiscence of prosthetic valve – new valvular regurgitation (increase or change in pre-existing murmur not sufficient) 7/98 medslides.com 15 Duke’s Minor Criteria • predisposition (predisposing heart condition or iv drug use) • fever of 100.40F or higher • vascular phenomena (major arterial emboli, septic pulmonary infarcts, mycotic aneurysm, intracranial hemorrhage, conjunctive hemorrhages, Janeway lesions) 7/98 medslides.com 16 Duke’s Minor Criteria • immunologic phenomena (glomerulonephritis, Osler’s nodes, Roth spots, rheumatoid factor) • microbiologic evidence (positive blood culture not meeting major criteria or serologic evidence of active infection with organism consistent with IE) • echocardiogram (consistent with IE but not meeting major criteria) 7/98 medslides.com 17 Risk for Endocarditis • High risk – prosthetic cardiac valve – prior episodes of endocarditis – complex congenital cardiac defect – surgically constructed systemicpulmonary shunts or conduits 7/98 medslides.com 18 Risk for Endocarditis • Moderate risk – patent ductus arteriosus – VSD, primum ASD – coarctation of the aorta – bicuspid aortic valve – hypertrophic cardiomyopathy – acquired valvular dysfunction – MVP with mitral regurgitation 7/98 medslides.com 19 Risk for Endocarditis • Low risk – isolated secundum atrial septal defect – ASD, VSD, or PDA >6 months past repair – “innocent” heart murmur by auscultation in the pediatric population – “innocent” heart murmur by echocardiography in adult patients 7/98 medslides.com 20 Treatment • Pre-antibiotic era - a death sentence • Antibiotic era – microbiologic cure in majority of patients 7/98 medslides.com 21 New Treatments • Right-sided infective endocarditis due to methicillin-susceptible S aureus (MSSA) in IV drug users – 2-wk therapy with a penicillinase-resistant penicillin and an aminoglycoside – 2-wk monotherapy with IV cloxacillin – short-term therapy is inappropriate if complicated by ostomyelitis, meningitis, myocardial abscess, or concomitant left-sided involvement 7/98 medslides.com 22 New Treatments • Highly penicillin-susceptible Streptococcus viridans or bovis – Once-daily ceftriaxone for 4 wks • cure rate > 98% • easily administered as outpatient, avoid hospitalization, offers significant cost savings – Once-daily ceftriaxone 2 g for 2wks followed by oral amoxicillin qid for 2 wks – Once-daily ceftriazone and netilmicin for 2 wks 7/98 medslides.com 23 New Treatments • Prosthetic valve endocarditis due to fluconazole-susceptible Candida species – many are due to bloodstream invasion – chronic oral suppressive therapy with fluconazole for inoperable disease 7/98 medslides.com 24 SBE Prophylaxis Standard general prophylaxis Unable to take oral meds Allergic to penicilin Allergic to penicillin and unable to take oral medications 7/98 amoxicillin ampicillin clindamycin cephalexin azithromycin clarithromycin clindamycin cefazolin medslides.com 25 References • • • Prevention of bacterial endocarditis. Recommended by the American Heart Association. Dajani AS, Taubert KA, Wilson W, et al. Circulation 1997;96:358-366 New Criteria for diagnosis of infective endocarditis: Utilization of specific echocardiographic findings. Durack DT, Lukes AS, Bright DK, et al. Am J Med 1994;96:200-209 Antibiotic treatment of adults with infective endocarditis due to strptococci, enterococci, staphlococci, and HACEK microorganisms. Wilson WR, Karchmer AW, Dajani AS. JAMA 1995;274:1706-1713 7/98 medslides.com 26