| Literature DB >> 15752438 |
Akila Benslimani1, Florence Fenollar, Hubert Lepidi, Didier Raoult.
Abstract
Blood culture-negative endocarditis is common in Algeria. We describe the etiology of infective endocarditis in this country. Samples from 110 cases in 108 patients were collected in Algiers. Blood cultures were performed in Algeria. Serologic and molecular analysis of valves was performed in France. Infective endocarditis was classified as definite in 77 cases and possible in 33. Causative agents were detected by blood cultures in 48 cases. All 62 blood culture-negative endocarditis cases were tested by serologic or molecular methods or both. Of these, 34 tested negative and 28 had an etiologic agent identified. A total of 18 infective endocarditis cases were caused by zoonotic and arthropodborne bacteria, including Bartonella quintana (14 cases), Brucella melitensis (2 cases), and Coxiella burnetii (2 cases). Our data underline the high prevalence of infective endocarditis caused by Bartonella quintana in northern Africa and the role of serologic and molecular tools for the diagnosis of blood culture-negative endocarditis.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 15752438 PMCID: PMC3320429 DOI: 10.3201/eid1102.040668
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Figure 1Map of Algeria. Courtesy of Wikipedia Encyclopedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki).
Primers used for broad-range 16S rRNA polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and, according to species identified by sequencing, primers targeting a second gene for confirmation of positive 16S rRNA PCR results and primers used for fungal PCR
| Microorganisms | Gene | Forward primer | Reverse primer |
|---|---|---|---|
| Eubacteria | 16S rRNA | 536f 5´ CAGCAGCCGCGGTAATAC | RP2 5´ ACGGCTACCTTGTTACGACTT |
| RpoB | StphF 5´ AAACCIATACGCAATTGGTT | StphR 5´ GTTTCATGACTTGGGACGG | |
| RpoB | StrpF 5´ AARYTIGGMCCTGAAGAAAT | StrpR 5´ TGIARTTTRTCATCAACCATGTG | |
| RpoB | StrpF 5´ AARYTIGGMCCTGAAGAAAT | StrpR 5´ TGIARTTTRTCATCAACCATGTG | |
|
| d1 5´ CCITAYICITAYGAYGCIYTIGARCC | d2 5´ ARRTARTAIGCRTGYTCCCAIACRTC | |
|
| RpoB | CM7 5´ AACCAGTTCCGCGTTGGCCTGG | CM31b 5´ CCTGAACAACACGCTCGGA |
|
|
| MH1F 5´ GTGTTGTATCGACAACAG | MH1R 5´ GTGTTGTATCGACAA |
|
| IS111 | Trans3 5´ CAACTGTGTGGAATTGATGA | Trans5 5´ TTTACATGACGCAATAGCGC |
| ITS | ITSF1 5´ GCGACTGGGGTGAAGTGG | ITSR1 5´ AGGCTTGGGATCATCATC | |
|
| Bc55F 5´ TCTCGTATGGAACGTGTTGT | Bc260R 5´ TGAACGTCACGYACTTCAAA | |
|
| C2700F 5´ GWATGAACATYGGBCAGGT | C3130R 5´ TCCATYTCRCCRAARCGCT | |
| Fungi | 18S-28S ITS | FCU 5´ TCCGTAGGTGAACCTGCGG | RCU 5´ GCTGCGTTCTTCATCGATGC |
Distribution of 110 infective endocarditis cases* diagnosed in Algeria using blood culture, cardiac valve culture, serologic testing, cardiac valve polymerase chain reaction (PCR), and PCR on serum samples
| Identified microorganisms | Positive samples/tested samples | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Blood culture (N = 110) | Cardiac valve culture (N = 38) | Serologic testing (N = 61) | Cardiac valve PCR (N = 38) | PCR on serum sample (N = 9) | Total | |
| 0/22 | 0/4 | NP | 7/0 | NP† | 24/0 | |
|
| 0/1‡ | 0/3 | 5/2 | 10/0 | 3/2 | 12/2 |
| 2/10 | 0/3 | NP | 2/1 | NP | 11/3 | |
| HACEK§ | 0/4 | 0/0 | NP | 1/1 | NP | 5/1 |
| 1/1 | 0/0 | NP | 1/0 | NP | 2/1 | |
|
| 0/1 | 0/0 | 2/0 | 2/0 | NP | 2/0 |
|
| 0/0 | 0/0 | 2/0 | 0/0 | 1/NP | 2/0 |
| 0/2 | 0/1 | NP | 1/0 | NP | 2/0 | |
| 0/0 | 0/0 | NP | 1/0 | NP | 1/0 | |
| Enterobacteria spp. | 1/1 | 0/0 | NP | 0/0 | NP | 1/1 |
|
| 0/1 | 0/0 | NP | 0/0 | NP | 1/0 |
|
| 0/1 | 0/0 | NP | 0/0 | NP | 1/0 |
|
| 0/0 | 0/0 | NP | 1/0 | NP | 1/0 |
| 0/0 | 0/1 | NP | 1/0 | NP | 1/0 | |
| Negative samples for definite infective endocarditis/negative samples for possible infective endocarditis | ||||||
| No etiology | 10/25 | 2/7 | 8/20 | 2/7 | NP/NP | |
*77 definite and 33 possible. †NP, not performed. ‡If we consider that Bartonella quintana was misidentified as Haemophilus influenzae. §HACEK, Haemophilus, Actinobacillus, Cardiobacterium, Eikenella, Kingella.
Living conditions, involved cardiac valves, and diagnostic tools for Bartonella quintana endocarditis cases in 14 patients*
| Patient | Living conditions | Involved cardiac valves | Blood culture | PCR on serum sample | Cardiac valve culture | Cardiac valve PCR | Histologic analysis | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Poor rural area | Aortic | – | 1:800 |
|
|
| NP |
| 2 | Poor rural area | Mitral | – | 1:1,600 | – | – |
| WS+/IC+ |
| 3 | Poor urban area | Mitral | – | 1:800 |
| NP | NP | WS+/IC+ |
| 4 | Poor rural area | Aortic | – | NP | NP | – |
| NP |
| 5 | Poor urban area | Tricuspid | +† | 1:1,600 |
| NP | NP | NP |
| 6 | Poor rural area | Aortic + mitral | – | NP | NP | – |
| WS+/IC+ |
| 7 | Unknown | Aortic + mitral | – | NP | NP | – |
| WS+/IC+ |
| 8 | Poor urban area | Aortic | – | 1:800 |
| – |
| WS+/IC+ |
| 9 | Good urban area | Aortic | – | NP | NP |
|
| WS+/IC+ |
| 10 | Good rural area | Aortic + mitral | – | NP | NP |
|
| WS+/IC+ |
| 11 | Poor urban area | Mitral | – | 1:3,200 | – | NP | NP | NP |
| 12 | Poor rural area | Aortic | – | 1:3,200 |
| NP | NP | NP |
| 13 | Poor rural area | Aortic | – | NP | NP | – |
| NP |
| 14 | Poor rural area | Aortic | – | NP | NP | – |
| NP |
*NP, not performed; WS+, Warthin-Starry positive; IC+, immunochemistry positive; PCR, polymerase chain reaction. †If we consider that B. quintana was misidentified as Haemophilus influenzae.
Figure 2Western blot performed with a serum sample from a patient with an endocarditis caused by Bartonella quintana. Molecular masses (in kilodaltons) are given to the left of the panels. A) Untreated serum sample analyzed with B. quintana (lane 1), B. henselae (lane 2), B. elizabethae (lane 3), B. vinsonii subsp. arupensis (lane 4), and B. vinsonii subsp. berkhoffii (lane 5) antigens. B) B. quintana–adsorbed serum sample analyzed with B. quintana (lane 1), B. henselae (lane 2), B. elizabethae (lane 3), B. vinsonii subsp. arupensis (lane 4), and B. vinsonii subsp. berkhoffii (lane 5) antigens. C) B. henselae–adsorbed serum analyzed with B. quintana (lane 1), B. henselae (lane 2), B. elizabethae (lane 3), B. vinsonii subsp. arupensis (lane 4), and B. vinsonii subsp. berkhoffii (lane 5) antigens.
Figure 3A) Section of an aortic valve from a patient with Bartonella endocarditis. Note the extensive fibrosis of the connective valve tissue (arrowhead), the vegetation (*), and the low inflammatory infiltrate of the valve tissue (hematoxylin-phloxine-saffron, original magnification 100x). B) Resected valve with Bartonella quintana infection showing darkly stained bacilli consistent with Bartonella. Note the numerous clusters of argyrophilic bacteria present in the valvular vegetation (Warthin-Starry silver, original magnification 1,000x). C) Immunohistochemical detection of B. quintana in a resected valve from a patient with Bartonella endocarditis. Note the extracellular distribution of the bacterial colonies (*) in the valvular vegetation (polyclonal antibody and hematoxylin counterstain, original magnification 250x).
Discrepant results between blood culture, cardiac valve culture, cardiac valve PCR, and serologic testing for 9 patients*
| Patient | Blood culture | Cardiac valve culture | 16S rRNA PCR | PCR targeting another gene | Histologic analysis | Serologic testing | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1† | Negative |
| NP | Negative |
| ||
| 2‡ | Negative | Polymicrobial |
|
| A | Negative |
|
| 3‡ | Negative | CNS |
| NP | A / BGN | Negative |
|
| 4‡ | Negative | CNS |
|
| NP | NP |
|
| 5‡ |
|
|
|
| A / CGP | Negative |
|
| 6† |
| NP | NP | NP | NP | 1:1,600 Positive PCR on serum samples |
|
| 7† |
|
|
|
| A | NP |
|
| 8‡ | Negative |
|
| A | Negative |
| |
| 9‡ | Negative |
|
|
| A / CGP | Negative |
|
*PCR, polymerase chain reaction; NP, not performed; CNS, coagulase-negative Staphylococcus; BGN, bacillus gram negative; CGP, cocci gram positive. †The microorganisms detected in valve culture were contaminants. ‡The microorganisms were misidentified.