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Vegetations are oscillating or nonoscillating intracardiac masses on the valves or other endocardial structures or intracardiac implanted materials.
Vegetations are typically located on the upstream side of the valves, are usually irregularly and grotesquely shaped, and exhibit disordered motions that are not in pattern with the excursion of the valve leaflets.
Abscesses are thick, nonhomogeneous, echolucent, or echodense perivalvular areas.
Three echocardiographic findings are considered to be major criteria for the diagnosis of endocarditis: (1) the presence of vegetations, (2) the presence of abscesses, and (3) the presence of new dehiscence in a valvular prosthesis ( Algorithm 7.1 , Figs. 7.2–7.4 , Tables 7.5 and 7.6 , Figs. 7.7–7.9 , Table 7.10 ).
Risk factors for fungal endocarditis |
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Intravenous drug abuse |
Prolonged antibiotic therapy |
Prolonged indwelling central venous catheter |
Prosthetic heart valve |
Previous history of endocarditis |
Parenteral nutrition |
Neutropenia |
Diabetes mellitus |
Clinical significance of fungal endocarditis |
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Fungal endocarditis is a very devastating disease |
Timely diagnosis is the key, because it presents mostly with general constitutional symptoms; high index of suspicion is required for early diagnosis. Induction treatment followed by suppressive therapy (in selected patients) is key to management |
Surgical replacement of the infected valve is a class I recommendation |
Localization of cardiac hydatid cysts (%) | |
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Left ventricle | 60 |
Right ventricle | 10 |
Pericardium | 7 |
Left atrium | 6–8 |
Right atrium | 3–4 |
Interventricular septum | 4 |
Any component of the heart is vulnerable to be involved by hydatid cysts, with the presentation depending on the location, size, and integrity of the cyst ( Figs. 7.11–7.18 , Tables 7.19–7.21 ).
Structural complications of infectious endocarditis |
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Cusp or leaflet rupture (flail leaflets) |
Perforation |
Abscess formation |
Aneurysms or pseudoaneurysms |
Fistula |
Dehiscence of prosthetic valves |
Formation of intracardiac shunts |
Embolization (systemic, cerebral, pulmonary) |
Factors associated with poor prognosis in right-sided infective endocarditis |
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Persistent infection that does not respond to antibiotic therapy |
Patients with worsening tricuspid regurgitation contributing to deteriorating right |
heart failure |
Increase in vegetation size despite antibiotic treatment |
Fungal etiology |
Recurrent septic pulmonary emboli |
Septic shock |
Multivalvular involvement |
Indications for surgical interventions for right-sided infective endocarditis |
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Microorganisms difficult to eradicate (e.g., persistent fungi) |
Large, persistent tricuspid valve vegetations (> 20 mm) |
Right heart failure secondary to severe tricuspid regurgitation |
Persistent bacteremia for > 7 d (e.g., Staphylococcus aureus , Pseudomonas aeruginosa ) despite adequate antimicrobial therapy |
Recurrent pulmonary emboli with or without concomitant right heart failure |
Abscess (more common in the setting of prosthetic valve) |
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