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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Infective endocarditis (IE) is now rare in
developed countries, but its prevalence is
higher in elderly patients with prosthetic
valves, diabetes, renal impairment, or heart
failure. An increase in health-care associated IE (HCAIE) has been observed due to invasive maneuvers (30% of cases).
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus
(MRSA) and Enterococcus are the most common
agents in HCAIE, causing high mortality
and morbidity.
We review complications of IE and its therapy, based on a patient with acute bivalvular left-sided MRSA IE and a prosthetic aortic valve, aggravated by congestive heart failure, stroke, acute immune complex glomerulonephritis, Candida parapsilosis fungémia and death probably due to Serratia marcescens sepsis. The HCAIE was
assumed to be related to three temporally
associated in-hospital interventions considered as possible initial etiological mechanisms: overcrowding in the hospital environment,iv quinolone therapy and red blood cell transfusion. Later in the clinical course,C. parapsilosis and S. marcescens septicemia were considered to be possible secondary etiological mechanisms of HCAIE.
Description
Keywords
Doença Aguda Lesão Renal Aguda Válvula Aórtica Bacteriemia Endocardite Bacteriana Resultado Fatal Fungemia Insuficiência Cardíaca Estafilocócos Aureus Meticilino-Resistente Infecções Relacionadas com Prótese Infecções por Estafilocócos Acidente Vascular Cerebral AVC HCC CAR HCC MED HCC NEF HCC PAT CLIN
Citation
Rev Port Cardiol. 2011 Jun;30(6):611-20
Publisher
Sociedade Portuguesa de Cardiologia