Infective endocarditis.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_FD31EF5E5DD4
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Publication sub-type
Review (review): journal as complete as possible of one specific subject, written based on exhaustive analyses from published work.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Infective endocarditis.
Journal
Nature Reviews. Cardiology
Author(s)
Que Y.A., Moreillon P.
ISSN
1759-5010 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
1759-5002
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2011
Volume
8
Number
6
Pages
322-336
Language
english
Abstract
Infective endocarditis (IE) is lethal if not aggressively treated with antibiotics alone or in combination with surgery. The epidemiology of this condition has substantially changed over the past four decades, especially in industrialized countries. Once a disease that predominantly affected young adults with previously well-identified valve disease--mostly chronic rheumatic heart disease--IE now tends to affect older patients and new at-risk groups, including intravenous-drug users, patients with intracardiac devices, and patients exposed to healthcare-associated bacteremia. As a result, skin organisms (for example, Staphylococcus spp.) are now reported as the pathogen in these populations more often than oral streptococci, which still prevail in the community and in native-valve IE. Moreover, progress in molecular diagnostics has helped to improve the diagnosis of poorly cultivable pathogens, such as Bartonella spp. and Tropheryma whipplei, which are responsible for blood-culture-negative IE more often than expected. Epidemiological data indicate that IE mostly occurs independently of medico-surgical procedures, and that circumstantial antibiotic prophylaxis is likely to protect only a minute proportion of individuals at risk. Therefore, new strategies to prevent IE--including improvement of dental hygiene, decontamination of carriers of Staphylococcus aureus, vaccination, and, possibly, antiplatelet therapy--must be explored.
Keywords
Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use, Antibiotic Prophylaxis, Cardiac Surgical Procedures, Drug Resistance, Bacterial, Endocarditis, Bacterial/diagnosis, Endocarditis, Bacterial/epidemiology, Endocarditis, Bacterial/</QualifierName> <QualifierName MajorTopicYN="N">, Humans, Predictive Value of Tests, Risk Factors, Treatment Outcome
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
31/08/2011 11:57
Last modification date
20/08/2019 17:28
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