| Literature DB >> 21906336 |
Romain Sonneville1, Bruno Mourvillier, Lila Bouadma, Michel Wolff.
Abstract
Patients with infective endocarditis (IE) are generally referred to the intensive care unit (ICU) for one or more organ dysfunctions caused by complications of IE. Neurologic events are frequent causes of ICU admission in patients with IE. They can arise through various mechanisms consisting of stroke or transient ischemic attack, cerebral hemorrhage, mycotic aneurysm, meningitis, cerebral abscess, or encephalopathy. Most complications occur early during the course of IE and are a hallmark of left-sided abnormalities of native or prosthetic valves. Occlusion of cerebral arteries, with stroke or transient ischemic attack, accounts for 40% to 50% of the central nervous system complications of IE. CT scan is the most easily feasible neuroimaging in critically unstable patients. However, magnetic resonance imaging is more sensitive and when performed should follow a standardized protocol. In patients with ischemic stroke who are already receiving oral anticoagulant therapy, this treatment should be replaced by unfractionated heparin for at least 2 weeks with a close monitoring of coagulation tests. Mounting evidence shows that, for both complicated left-sided native valve endocarditis and Staphylococcus aureus prosthetic valve endocarditis, valve replacement combined with medical therapy is associated with a better outcome than medical treatment alone. In a recent series, approximately 50% of patients underwent valve replacement during the acute phase of IE before completion of antibiotic treatment. After a neurological event, most patients have at least one indication for cardiac surgery. Recent data from literature suggest that after a stroke, surgery indicated for heart failure, uncontrolled infection, abscess, or persisting high emboli risk should not be delayed, provided that the patient is not comatose or has no severe deficit. Neurologic complications of IE contribute to a severe prognosis in ICU patients. However, patients with only silent or transient stroke had a better prognosis than patients with symptomatic events. In addition, more than neurologic event per se, a better predictor of mortality is neurologic dysfunction, which is associated with location and extension of brain damage. Patients with severe neurological impairment and those with brain hemorrhage have the worse outcome.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21906336 PMCID: PMC3224466 DOI: 10.1186/2110-5820-1-10
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Intensive Care ISSN: 2110-5820 Impact factor: 6.925
Neurologic complications of IE and outcome in nine series
| Author, yr | No. of IE | Patients with CNS complications, n (%) | Embolic events, n, (%) | Overall mortality (%) | Mortality of patients with CNS complications (%) | Cardiac surgery in patients with CNS complications, n (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Salgado, 1989 | 175 | 64 (36.5) | 27 (42) | 13.6 | 20.6 | NR |
| One institution USA | ||||||
| Roder, 1997 | 260 | 91 (35) | 56 | 74 | 81 (89) | |
| 63 hospitals, Denmark | ||||||
| Heiro, 2000 | 218 | 55 (25) | 23 (42) | 14 | 24 | 15 (27) |
| One institution Finland | ||||||
| Anderson, 2003 | 707 | 68 (9.6) | 49 (72) | NR | 52 (1-yr) | 13 (19) |
| One referral center USA | ||||||
| Mourvillier, 2004 | 228 | 84 (37) | 31 (37) | 45 (in-hospital) | 57 | 104 (46) |
| 2 referral centers | ||||||
| France | ||||||
| Ruttmann, 2006 | 214 | 65 (30) | 61 (94) | 21 | 17 (median follow-up: 5.9 yr) | 65 (100) |
| Cardiac surgery | ||||||
| Austria | ||||||
| Corral, 2007 | 550 | 71 (13) | 42 (60) | 11 | 34 | 26 (41) |
| One institution | ||||||
| Spain | ||||||
| Thuny, 2007 | 496 | 109 (22) | 80 (73) | 16 (6-mo) | 22 (6-mo) | 63 (58) |
| 2 referral centers | 19 (1-yr) | 25 (1-yr) | ||||
| France | 31 (5-yr) | 38 (5-yr) | ||||
| Sonneville, 2011 | 198 | 108 (55) | 79 (73) | 57 (3-mo) | 58 (3-mo) | 53 (49) |
| 23 ICUs | ||||||
| France | ||||||
NR, not reported.
Figure 1T2*-weighted gradient echo image. Multiple cerebellar microbleeds in a patient with infective endocarditis. (Reprinted from reference 12 with permission).
Figure 2Diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging. Acute hyperintense ischemic strokes in both hemispheres and in vertebro-basilar territories in the same patient (Reprinted from reference 12 with permission).
Cardiac surgery in ICU patients with IE and neurologic complications
| Surgery possible if required | Surgery to be delayed or contraindicated |
|---|---|
| Heart failure, uncontrolled infection, abscess, high embolic risk | |
| Silent neurologic complications (CT scan, MRI) | Severe comorbidities |
| Transient ischemic attack | Severe septic shock |
| Stroke | Stroke and coma or extensive neurologic deficit |
| Microbleeds or very small hemorrhagic lesions | Intracranial hemorrhage (other than microbleeds or very small hemorrhagic) |
| Meningitis | Meningitis and coma (rare) |
| Brain abscess | Brain abscess associated with intracranial hypertension |
| Small ICMA | Very large or enlarging ICMA |