Infectious Diseases - Infective Endocarditis
Infectious Diseases - Infective Endocarditis
Infectious Diseases - Infective Endocarditis
Jason Kollios
Zhi Kai Chua
Sam Craven
Aspergillus niger
Escherichia coli
Klebsiella pneumoniae
Enterococcus faecalis
Staphylococcus aureus
Streptococcus mitis
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Stevens-Johnson Syndrome
Vestibular dysfunction
Pancytopenia
Renal failure
Alopecia
A. Change antibiotics
B. Diuretics
C. Urgent valve replacement
D. Perform rapid penicillin desensitisation and commence
flucloxacillin
E. Admission to ICU with balloon pump insertion
8) Question 50 (2008)
A 56-year-old man with a past history of bicuspid aortic
valve develops bacteraemia with Staphylococcus aureus
and echocardiography shows a 1.0 cm vegetation on the
aortic valve. He has a known history of penicillin
hypersensitivity he reports a sudden onset of tongue and
throat swelling after receiving the drug when he was 20 years
old. What is the most appropriate intravenous antibiotic?
A. Ceftriaxone.
B. Meropenem.
C. Vancomycin.
D. Clindamycin.
E. Flucloxacillin
9) Question 56 (2006)
A 62-year-old man is admitted to hospital with fevers, malaise and myalgias six
weeks after a laparoscopic cholecystectomy. On examination he has a
temperature of 39C, Splinter haemorrhages and a loud pansystolic murmur.
He has a past history of mitral valve prolapse which was diagnosed by
echocardiography. Enterococcus faecalis has been identified in three sets of
blood cultures. The isolate is highly sensitive to penicillin. He has no known
allergies.
The most appropriate therapy is:
A.
B.
C.
D.
E.
ceftriaxone.
vancomycin alone.
ampicillin alone.
ampicillin and gentamicin.
cephalothin and gentamicin.
Epidemiology
Roughly 2-7 cases per 100,000
In-hospital mortality 15-20%
Males > Females
More common in age > 65
Up to 1/3 health care-associated
16-30% involve prosthetic valves
80-90% L-sided endocarditis (mitral, aortic)
50% cases occur in patients with no history of valve disease
Risk Factors
Structural heart disease
Valvular (e.g. rheumatic heart disease, MVP)
Congenital heart disease
Prosthetic valves
History of infective endocarditis
Intravascular/cardiac device
Intravenous drug use
Haemodialysis
HIV
Pathogenesis
Table taken from Antimicrobial Chemotherapy, 5th Edn, Greenwood, Finch, Davey and Wilcox
Pathogenesis
Endothelial injury
Bacteraemia
Dental abscess, infected skin lesion, or vascular catheter
Adherence of bacteria to NBTE
S. aureus can adhere directly to intact endothelium
Acute vs Subacute
Acute
Subacute
Develops insidiously and progresses slowly
Often affects abnormal/damaged valves
Slow if any cardiac structure damage, rarely metastasizes, gradually
progressive
e.g. Streptococcus, enterococcus, S. aureus, CoNS, HACEK
Symptoms
Fever (80-90%)
Chills, sweats (40-75%)
Anorexia, malaise, weight loss (25-50%)
Myalgias, arthralgias (15-30%)
Back pain (7-15%)
Other depending on site of septic embolisation
Signs
Fever (80-90%)
New murmur (80-85%)
Worsening of known murmur (20-50%)
Arterial emboli (20-50%)
Splenomegaly (15-50%)
Clubbing (10-20%)
Neurological manifestations (20-40%)
Petechiae (10-40%)
Splinter haemorrhages (8%)
Janeways lesions (5%)
Roths spots (5%)
Oslers nodes (5%)
Conjunctival haemorrhage (5%)
Organisms
Depends on:
Native vs prosthetic
Source of infection
Host factors
Timeframe
Bacteria
S. mutans
S. bovis
S. sanguis
S. mitior
Enterococcus
S. angiosus/milleri
Group G strep
Group B strep
Group A strep
Endocarditis: Non-endocarditis
14:1
6:1
3:1
2:1
1:1.2
1:3
1:3
1:7
1:32
Table taken from 2014 FRACP Endocarditis lecture, adapted from Mandell, Douglas and Bennett
Gastrointestinal
Strep bovis (gallolyticus) (associated with GI cancers)
Genitourinary
Enterococci
Prophylaxis
High Risk Patients
prosthetic cardiac valve or prosthetic material used for cardiac
valve repair
previous infective endocarditis
congenital heart disease but only if it involves:
unrepaired cyanotic defects, including palliative shunts and conduits
completely repaired defects with prosthetic material or devices during
the first 6 months after the procedure (after which the prosthetic
material is likely to have been endothelialised)
repaired defects with residual defects at or adjacent to the site of a
prosthetic patch or device (which inhibit endothelialisation)
Prophylaxis
High Risk Procedures
Dental
Extraction
Periodontal surgery
Replanting avulsed teeth
(there is a group of procedures where it may be considered)
Respiratory
Invasive procedure to treat an abscess
Tonsillectomy/adenoidectomy
Gastrointestinal
Established genitourinary/GI infection, ensure enterococcus cover
Diagnosis
Clinical Suspicion
Clinical context with risk factors
Microbiological Evidence
Draw blood cultures
If three sets of cultures are taken prior to Abx, around 90% of
organisms are identified
Echocardiographic Evidence
TTE vs TOE
Clinical Criteria
Two major OR One major and three minor OR five minor
Major
Positive blood culture for IE
Typical organisms- Viridans strep, Staph aureus, HACEK, enterococci
Persistently positive blood cultures more than 12hrs apart
Single positive culture or serology for Coxiella burnetii
Minor
Treatment
Many specific regimes
Some have been asked about in the RACP exam
Difficulty with therapy
Vegetations avascular, encased in fibrin
Need high dose antibiotics to penetrate vegetation
Need longer treatment time to prevent relapse
Treatment
Staphylococcal endocarditis
If MSSA- Flucloxacillin for 4-6 weeks
If MRSA- Vancomycin for 4-6 weeks
HACEK endocarditis
Ceftriaxone for 4-6 weeks
Treatment
Viridans streptococci endocarditis
Uncomplicated
Benzylpenicillin PLUS Gentamicin for 2 weeks
OR Benzylpenicillin alone for 4 weeks
Complicated
Benzylpenicillin (4 weeks) PLUS Gentamicin for 2 weeks
Enterococcal endocarditis
Intrinsically more resistant, so even if susceptible to penicillins
needs the addition of gentamicin
Gentamicin (4-6 weeks)
PLUS EITHER
Treatment
Why gentamicin with streptococci and enterococci?
Gentamicin alone has little activity against streptococci
Treatment
Penicillin Hypersensitivity
Two Strategies
1) Desensitisation
2) Alternative antibiotics
Will depend on bacteria cultures and sensitivities.
Complications
Heart Failure
Can happen acutely or subacutely
Most common cause of death in IE
Aortic valve most at risk
Perivalvular Abscess
Most common at the aortic valve and annulus
Can extend into conducting tissues, causing heart block
Complications
Septic Embolisation
Complications
Related to therapy
Class IIa
Failure of medical management- recurrent emboli or new
vegetations
Class IIb
Prevention of emboli if mobile vegetation >10mm
F
B
A
E
C
C
C
C
D
Thank You