Literature DB >> 12783733

[Predictors of hospital mortality in 186 cases of active infective endocarditis treated in a tertiary medical center (1992-2001)].

J Horacio Casabé1, Héctor Deschle, Claudia Cortés, Pablo Stutzbach, Alejandro Hershson, Claudia Nagel, Eduardo Guevara, Augusto Torino, Héctor Raffaelli, Roberto R Favaloro, Luis D Suárez.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION AND
OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to describe the predictors of hospital mortality found in patients admitted for infective endocarditis (IE) to a cardiovascular surgery ward. Patients and method. Prospective study of 186 patients with IE treated in our hospital between 1992 and 2001.
RESULTS: One hundred fourteen patients (61.3%) had native valve endocarditis and 72 (38.7%) had prosthetic valve endocarditis (early in 28 patients [up to 12 months after surgery] and late in 44 [later than 12 months]). Blood cultures were positive in 82%. The predominant organism was Streptococcus viridans (36%) in native valve endocarditis and Staphylococcus aureus (33%) in prosthetic valve endocarditis. The hospital mortality was 22.6%. Severe sepsis (4.8%) produced a high mortality rate (88%) and was caused by Staphylococcus aureus in 60%. One hundred nineteen patients (64%) required surgery, 79 (66.4%) of them urgently. Negative blood cultures predicted need for surgery in native valve endocarditis (p < 0.05). The surgical mortality was 21.8% and was related to NYHA III-IV class (p = 0.014) and emergency surgery (p = 0.009) in patients with native valve endocarditis. This last factor also predicted higher surgical mortality in patients with early prosthetic valve endocarditis (p < 0.001).
CONCLUSIONS: The hospital mortality of this group of patients with infective endocarditis treated in a tertiary medical center was high. The presence of severe sepsis, although infrequent, had a somber prognosis. Severe heart failure in native valve endocarditis and urgent surgery in native and prosthetic valve endocarditis increased surgical mortality.

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Mesh:

Year:  2003        PMID: 12783733     DOI: 10.1016/s0300-8932(03)76919-x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Rev Esp Cardiol        ISSN: 0300-8932            Impact factor:   4.753


  3 in total

1.  Electronic medical record-based deep data cleaning and phenotyping improve the diagnostic validity and mortality assessment of infective endocarditis: medical big data initiative of CMUH.

Authors:  Hsiu-Yin Chiang; Li-Ying Liang; Che-Chen Lin; Yi-Jin Chen; Min-Yen Wu; Sheng-Hsuan Chen; Pin-Hua Wu; Chin-Chi Kuo; Chih-Yu Chi
Journal:  Biomedicine (Taipei)       Date:  2021-09-01

2.  Multivalvular Endocarditis: A Rare Condition with Poor Prognosis.

Authors:  Sara Álvarez-Zaballos; Victor González-Ramallo; Eduard Quintana; Patricia Muñoz; Sofía de la Villa-Martínez; M Carmen Fariñas; Francisco Arnáiz-de Las Revillas; Arístides de Alarcón; M Ángeles Rodríguez-Esteban; José M Miró; Miguel Angel Goenaga; Josune Goikoetxea-Agirre; Elisa García-Vázquez; Lucía Boix-Palop; Manuel Martínez-Sellés
Journal:  J Clin Med       Date:  2022-08-13       Impact factor: 4.964

3.  Mortality Predictors in the Surgical Treatment of Active Infective Endocarditis.

Authors:  Jenny Lourdes Rivas de Oliveira; Magaly Arrais Dos Santos; Renato Tambellini Arnoni; Auristela Ramos; Dorival Della Togna; Samira Kaissar Ghorayeb; Roberto Tadeu Magro Kroll; Luiz Carlos Bento de Souza
Journal:  Braz J Cardiovasc Surg       Date:  2018 Jan-Feb
  3 in total

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