| Literature DB >> 27355045 |
Soumik Ghosh1, Ratnakar Sahoo1, Ranjit Kumar Nath2, Nandini Duggal3, Adesh Kumar Gadpayle1.
Abstract
Infective endocarditis, a great masquerader, is a clinical entity which may present with a myriad of manifestations. Its changing epidemiological profile has been studied in the previous decades in both the developed and the developing nations. In this study, we strived to uphold the evolving clinical profile and its outcome from a government tertiary care hospital in Northern India. It was a descriptive, cross-sectional, observational study conducted over two years' period involving 44 patients diagnosed with definite infective endocarditis, according to modified Dukes' criteria. Demographic, clinical, microbiological, and echocardiographic data were analysed. Mean age of patients was 31 years. Rheumatic heart disease with regurgitant lesions was the commonest risk factor. Dyspnea and fever were the predominant symptom, and pallor and heart failure the commonest sign. Cultures were positive in 52% with Staphylococcus, the major isolate. Transesophageal echocardiography fared better than transthoracic one to define the vegetations. Mortality is reported in 4.5%. Prolonged duration of fever, pallor, hematuria, proteinuria, rheumatoid factor positivity, and large vegetations proved to be poor prognostic variables. Culture positive endocarditis, with persistent bacteremia, had higher incidence of acute renal failure. Right sided endocarditis was frequent in congenital lesions or IV drug user, whereas left sided endocarditis mostly presented with atrial fibrillation.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 27355045 PMCID: PMC4897572 DOI: 10.1155/2014/340601
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Sch Res Notices ISSN: 2356-7872
Baseline laboratory investigation values.
| Parameters | Mean ± SD | Ref. range |
|---|---|---|
| Hemoglobin (gm%) | 9.6 ± 1.04 | 12–15 |
| TLC | 11.9 ± 4.98 × 103 | 4–11 × 103 |
| ESR (mm 1st hr) | 25 ± 13.5 | <10 |
| Neutrophilia | 79% ± 10.1% | <65% |
| MCV (fL) | 84 ± 5 | 80–96 |
| Blood urea (mg%) | 60 ± 60.4 | 15–40 |
| Iron saturation | 17.1 ± 17.9 | 20–50 |
| Bilirubin (mg%) | 1.04 ± 1.07 | 0.2–1.0 |
| SGOT (IU/L) | 55 ± 58.5 | 15–45 |
| SGPT (IU/L) | 40 ± 39.8 | 15–45 |
| Albumin (gm%) | 3.3 ± 0.7 | 3.5–4.5 |
| Creatinine (mg%) | 1.77 ± 2.8 | 0.5–1.5 |
TLC = total leucocyte count; ESR = erythrocyte sedimentation rate; MCV = mean corpuscular volume; SGOT = serum glutamate oxaloacetate transferase; SGPT = serum glutamate pyruvate transferase.
Summary of clinical profile of patients of IE (n = 44).
| Parameters | Mean ± SD | Percentage |
|---|---|---|
| Age | 31 ± 11.6 years | — |
| Sex | 34 males/10 females | M : F:: 3.4 : 1 |
| Duration of hospitalisation | 24 ± 8.6 days | — |
|
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| Fever | 40 | 91% |
| Duration | 19 ± 7.9 days | — |
| Dyspnea | ||
| NYHA grade | ||
| IV | 22 | 50% |
| III | 18 | 41% |
| II | 4 | 9% |
| Palpitation (sudden onset) | 34 | 77% |
| Weight loss | 20 | 45% |
|
| ||
| Pallor | 36 | 82% |
| Clubbing | 26 | 59% |
| Pedal edema | 22 | 50% |
| Icterus | 6 | 14% |
| Raised JVP | 22 | 50% |
| AF (new onset) | 10 | 23% |
| Hepatomegaly | 16 | 36% |
| Splenomegaly | 24 | 55% |
| Cardiogenic shock | 6 | 14% |
| (RHD: 4/CHD: 2) | ||
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| ||
| Clinical outcomes | ||
| Heart failure | 22 | 50% |
| Acute renal failure | 16 | 36% |
| Embolic events | 27% | |
| Pulmonary | 8 | |
| Cerebral | 4 | |
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| Prognosis | ||
| Discharge | 42 | 95.5% |
| Death | 2 | 4.5% |
Incidence of important clinicopathological conditions.
| Variables* | Percentage |
|---|---|
| Proteinuria | 68% |
| Hematuria | 50% |
| Anemia | 68% |
| Iron def. | 59% |
| Microcytosis | 32% |
| Uremia | 36% |
| Jaundice | 18% |
| Hypoalbuminemia | 27% |
| Neutrophilia | 72% |
*Attributes: proteinuria = spot urinary protein >30 mg/dL; hematuria = >3 RBCs/hpf in urine; anemia = Hb <12 gm%; iron deficiency = transferrin saturation <20%; microcytosis = MCV < 80 fL; uremia = blood urea >45 mg%/serum creatinine >1.5 mg%; jaundice = bilirubin >2.5 mg%; hypoalbuminemia <3 gm%; neutrophilia = TLC > 11 × 103/μL.
Figure 1Pie chart to categorize the various microbial etiologies for IE on basis of blood cultures.
Figure 2Segmental pie chart showing the localization of vegetation sites on various cardiac structures by TTE and TEE. Note: TTE failed to localise the vegetation of the mentioned sites determined by TEE. (AV: aortic valve, AML: anterior mitral leaflet, PV: pulmonary valve, PML: posterior mitral leaflet, RCC: right coronary cusp, and TV: tricuspid valve).
Valvular lesions associated with IE.
| Rheumatic heart disease | 28 (64%) | Congenital heart disease | 10 (22%) |
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| Mitral stenosis | 8 | Ventricular septal defect | 8 |
| Mitral regurgitation | 25 | With TR | 4 |
| Aortic stenosis | 2 | With PS | 1 |
| Aortic regurgitation | 19 | Bicuspid aortic valve | 2 |
| Tricuspid regurgitation | 16 | With AS | 1 |
| Mitral valve prolapse | 4 | With AR | 2 |
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| Marfan's syndrome | 2 (5%) | Normal valve | 4 (9%) |
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| Aortic regurgitation (post-AVR) | 1 | Tricuspid regurgitation | 4 |
| Mitral regurgitation | 2 | Mitral regurgitation | 2 |
Figure 3TTE showing vegetation attached to the lower margin of perimembranous VSD and papillary muscle of septal leaflet of tricuspid valve in one of our patients with CHD.
Correlation between clinical, echocardiographic, and microbiological variables with statistical significance.
| Variables | Heart failure | ARF | Embolic events | Vegetation size | Vegetation site |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Duration of fever |
| 0.155 |
|
|
|
| Fever grade |
| 0.170 | 0.459 |
|
|
| Pallor |
| 0.170 | 0.402 | 0.433 |
|
| Hematuria |
|
| 0.199 | 0.223 | 0.059 |
| Proteinuria |
|
|
|
|
|
| Risk factors | 0.063 | 0.751 |
|
|
|
| ECG | 0.472 | 0.237 | 0.697 | 0.148 |
|
| RF | 0.086 | 0.067 |
|
| 0.751 |
| Cultures | 0.349 |
| 0.194 |
|
|
| Iron saturation | 1.000 | 0.093 | 1.000 |
|
|
| Vegetation size |
| 0.164 |
| NA | — |
| Vegetation site |
| 0.468 |
|
| NA |
Calculated by Pearson's chi-square test and Fischer's Exact test analysis and significance obtained (highlighted in bold) when P value < 0.05.
Attributes:
duration of fever: presence of prolonged pyrexia (>14 days' duration); fever grade: high grade fever >101°F; risk factors: presence of predisposing cardiac condition like CHD or being IDU apart from RHD; ECG: presence of tachy/bradyarrhythmias; RF: rheumatoid factor positive; cultures: blood cultures positive compatible to modified Duke's criteria; iron saturation; presence of iron deficiency; vegetation size: vegetations >10 mm size in their long axis; vegetation site: right sided chamber/valvular lesions.
Multivariate regression analysis of disease outcome with various clinical variables indicating P value for significance.
| Outcomes | Duration of fever | Hematuria | Proteinuria | Rheumatoid factor | Iron deficiency | Vegetation size |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Heart failure |
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| Acute renal failure |
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| Vegetation size |
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| Vegetation site |
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Figure 4TEE showing large vegetations attached to the anterior and septal leaflet of a normal tricuspid valve in one of our IDU patients presenting with IE.