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Review
. 1992 Jul;85(7):959-65.

[Outcome of prognostic factors of infectious endocarditis over a 16 year period. Apropos of 471 cases]

[Article in French]
Affiliations
  • PMID: 1449342
Review

[Outcome of prognostic factors of infectious endocarditis over a 16 year period. Apropos of 471 cases]

[Article in French]
S Witchitz et al. Arch Mal Coeur Vaiss. 1992 Jul.

Abstract

Four hundred and seventy one cases of infective endocarditis (IE) were reviewed: 338 native valve IE and 133 prosthetic valve IE (42 early and 91 late IE). Two periods were compared: 1973-1980 (250 cases) and 1981-1988 (221 cases). There was a decrease in native valve IE (78% to 64%) and an increase in late prosthetic valve IE (13% to 27%), little change with respect to age, causal cardiac disease, delay in diagnosis (except in native valve IE, 39 to 29 days), or frequency of complications, especially cardiac (50% and 51%). However, global mortality decreased from 41% to 27% (p < 0.001). The evolution of the frequency of cardiac complications, cardiac surgery and mortality for the two periods was: for native valve IE respectively 53% to 42%, 41% to 37%, 37% to 20% (p < 0.005); for early prosthetic valve IE respectively, 45% to 55%, 41% to 55%, and 82% to 50% (p < 0.05); for late prosthetic IE, respectively 34% to 69%, 34% to 69% and 37% to 36%. The frequency of surgery had therefore little influence on prognosis except in early prosthetic valve IE. The percentage of infections which could not be controlled medically decreased from 17% to 11%. The mortality of unoperated patients decreased from 46% to 28% (p < 0.01), suggesting more effective antibiotherapy, and the mortality of operated patients fell from 34% to 26%. Global surgical mortality was 35% in the acute phase (positive valve culture), 14% after sterilisation (p < 0.001) and the corresponding frequencies of paravalvular leaks was 17% and 4% (p < 0.01).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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