| Literature DB >> 32128503 |
Anne Margje Lisa Naomi van Ommen1, Serena Slavenburg2, Rob Diepersloot1, Cornelia Adriana de Vries Feyens1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Infective endocarditis is a relatively common disease in a cardiologist's daily practice. Nowadays more detailed information about pathogens is provided to us by diagnostics such as MALDI Biotyper Massa Spectrometer. We present a case of endocarditis lenta in which Streptococcus sinensis was identified in the Netherlands for the first time. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Case report; Endocarditis lenta; Infective endocarditis; Medical microbiology; Streptococcus sinensis
Year: 2020 PMID: 32128503 PMCID: PMC7047072 DOI: 10.1093/ehjcr/ytz237
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Heart J Case Rep ISSN: 2514-2119
Figure 1Large vegetation at the mitral valve. (A) Transthoracic ultrasound. Parasternal short-axis view. (B) Transthoracic ultrasound. Apical four-chamber view.
| Three months earlier | Patient experienced high fever, chills, and nocturnal sweating |
| Day 0 | Presentation to the emergency room with general weakness and weight loss, a holosystolic heart murmur was discovered. Additional testing showed severe anaemia and kidney dysfunction. Treatment with penicillin and gentamycin was started for the ‘working diagnosis’ endocarditis. |
| Day 1 | A transthoracic echocardiogram revealed a large vegetation of the posterior mitral valve. |
| Day 2 | A transoesophageal echocardiogram showed a vegetation on the posterior mitral valve leaflet and destruction of the valve leaflet with a severe mitral regurgitation, additionally, there is a satellite lesion at the aortic root. |
| Day 3–6 | Continuing with only penicillin, |
| Day 6 | Patient had an altered mental state, computed tomography scanning shows cerebral infarction of the right frontal lobe. |
| Day 8 | Haemorrhagic transformation of the cerebral infarction. Patient died. |