Clujul Med. 2015;88(3):338-42. doi: 10.15386/cjmed-482. Epub 2015 Jul 01.
Surgical outcomes in native valve infectious endocarditis: the experience of the Cardiovascular Surgery Department - Cluj-Napoca Heart Institute.
Clujul medical (1957)
Adrian Molnar, Ioan Muresan, Catalin Trifan, Dana Pop, Diana Sacui
Affiliations
Affiliations
- Cardiovascular Surgery Department, Heart Institute Cluj-Napoca, Romania ; Cardiovascular Surgery Department, Iuliu Hatieganu University of Medicine and Pharmacy, Cluj-Napoca, Romania.
- Cardiovascular Surgery Department, Heart Institute Cluj-Napoca, Romania.
- Cardiology Department, Clinical Rehabilitation Hospital, Cluj-Napoca, Romania.
PMID: 26609267
PMCID: PMC4632893 DOI: 10.15386/cjmed-482
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: The introduction of Duke's criteria and the improvement of imaging methods has lead to an earlier and a more accurate diagnosis of infectious endocarditis (IE). The options for the best therapeutic approach and the timing of surgery are still a matter of debate and require a close colaboration between the cardiologist, the infectionist and the cardiac surgeon.
METHODS: We undertook a retrospective, descriptive study, spanning over a period of five years (from January 1st, 2007 to December 31st, 2012), on 100 patients who underwent surgery for native valve infectious endocarditis in our unit.
RESULTS: The patients' age varied between 13 and 77 years (with a mean of 54 years), of which 85 were males (85%). The main microorganisms responsible for IE were: Streptococcus Spp. (21 cases - 21%), Staphylococcus Spp. (15 cases - 15%), and Enterococcus Spp. (9 cases - 9%). The potential source of infection was identified in 26 patients (26%), with most cases being in the dental area (16 cases - 16%). The lesions caused by IE were situated in the left heart in 96 patients (96%), mostly on the aortic valve (50 cases - 50%). In most cases (82%) we found preexisting endocardial lesions which predisposed to the development of IE, most of them being degenerative valvular lesions (38 cases - 38%). We performed the following surgical procedures: surgery on a single valve - aortic valve replacement (40 cases), mitral valve replacement (19 cases), mitral valve repair (1 case), surgery on more than one valve - mitral and aortic valve replacement (20 cases), aortic and tricuspid valve replacement (1 case), aortic valve replacement with a mechanical valve associated with mitral valve repair (5 cases), aortic valve replacement with a biological valve associated with mitral valve repair (2 cases), and mitral valve replacement with a mechanical valve combined with De Vega procedure on the tricuspid valve (1 case). In 5 patients (5%) the bacteriological examination of valve pieces excised during surgery was positive. In 3 cases it matched the germ identified in the hemocultures, and in 2 cases it evidenced another bacterium.
CONCLUSION: The overall mortality of 5% is well between the limits presented in literature, being higher (30%) in patients who required emergency surgery. For the patients who return into our clinic with prosthetic valve endocarditis, the mortality after surgery was even higher (50%).
Keywords: antibiotic therapy; emergency surgery; infectious endocarditis; mortality
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