Endocarditis

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Puls: Caused by Arthritis

Clinic

  • Inflammation of the inner layer of endocardium, which usually involves the heart valves.
  • Other structures that may be involved include the interventricular septum, the chordae tendineae, the mural endocardium, or the surfaces of intracardiac devices.
  • Endocarditis is characterized by lesions, known as vegetations, which is a mass of platelets, fibrin, microcolonies of microorganisms, and scant inflammatory cells.
  • In the subacute form of infective endocarditis, the vegetation may also include a center of granulomatous tissue, which may fibrose or calcify.

Sign / Symptoms

  • Fu-like feeling, Fever, Chills, Sweating, Malaise, Weakness, Anorexia, Weight loss,
  • Splenomegaly
  • Cardiac murmur
  • Heart failure
  • Petechia (red spots on the skin)
  • Osler's nodes (subcutaneous nodules found on hands and feet)
  • Janeway lesions (nodular lesions on palms and soles),
  • Roth's spots (retinal hemorrhages)


Infective endocarditis

  • Infective endocarditis usually involve the valves.
  • Symptoms may include fever, small areas of bleeding into the skin, heart murmur, feeling tired, and low red blood cells.
  • Complications: Valvular insufficiency, Heart failure, Stroke, Kidney failure.
  • Causation: Typically a bacterial (Streptococci or Staphylococci) and less commonly a fungal infection.

Nonbacterial thrombotic endocarditis

  • NBTE is most commonly found on previously undamaged valves.
  • Opposed to infective endocarditis, the vegetations in NBTE are small, sterile, and tend to aggregate along the edges of the valve or the cusps.
  • Unlike infective endocarditis, NBTE does not cause an inflammation response from the body.
  • NBTE usually occurs during a hypercoagulable state such as system-wide bacterial infection, or pregnancy, though it is also sometimes seen in patients with venous catheters.
  • NBTE may also occur in patients with cancers, particularly mucinous adenocarcinoma where Trousseau syndrome can be encountered.
  • Typically NBTE does not cause many problems on its own, but parts of the vegetations may break off and embolize to the heart or brain, or they may serve as a focus where bacteria can lodge, thus causing infective endocarditis.

Libman–Sacks endocarditis

  • It occurs more often in patients with lupus erythematosus and is thought to be due to the deposition of immune complexes.
  • Like NBTE, Libman-Sacks endocarditis involves small vegetations, while infective endocarditis is composed of large vegetations.
  • These immune complexes precipitate an inflammation reaction, which helps to differentiate it from NBTE.
  • Also unlike NBTE, Libman-Sacks endocarditis does not seem to have a preferred location of deposition and may form on the undersurfaces of the valves or even on the endocardium.

Miasms

  • CXB: A known cause of viral endocarditis is enterovirus, esp coxsackie B2. [1]
  • CMV [2]
  • HCV [3]

Related disease

Endocardial fibroelastosis

Tissue Salt Remedies

  • KS
  • SIL

Repertory

Quality

  • Acute:
  1. Acon, Cact, Colch, Lach, Naja, Spig
  2. Ars, Bell, Carb0v, Dig, Mang, Spong, Tab
  • Valve problem with:
    • Mitral : Spig
    • Other Valves: Kali-i
    • Asthma with: Kalm
  • Recurrent: Coc-c
  • Stitching heart pain: Spig

Etiology

  • After membranous pharyngitis: Lach
  • After Erysipelas: Lach
  • Rheumatic:
    1. Aur, Kalm, Lach
    2. Ars, Aur-m, Bry, Cact, Colch, Hyos, Kali-n, Phos, Rhus-t, Spig, Spong, Sumb

Accompanied by

  • Fear with: Acon, Cocc
    • Pain with: Aur, Kalm
  • Knee arthritis with: Acon, Ars, Chinin-s, Crot-h, Lach, Vip
  • Scanty period with: Nat-m
  • Pneumonia with : Phos

Related disease

Heart valvular disorders

  1. Blumental S, Reynders M, Willems A et al. Enteroviral infection of a cardiac prosthetic device. Clin. Infect. Dis. 52(6), 710–716 (2011). • Case report detailing an endocarditis resistant to empirical therapies and a noted coxsackie infection.
  2. Stear TJ, Shersher D, Kim GJ, Smego DR. Valvular Cytomegalovirus Endocarditis. Ann Thorac Surg. 2016 Aug;102(2):e105-7. doi: 10.1016/j.athoracsur.2016.01.074. PMID: 27449440.
  3. Zito, A., De Pascalis, A., Montinaro, V. et al. Successful treatment of infectious endocarditis-associated glomerulonephritis during active hepatitis C infection: a case report. BMC Nephrol 23, 390 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12882-022-02985-3