Spectrum of right-sided infective endocarditis: an Indian experience
- PMID: 1572739
- DOI: 10.1016/0167-5273(92)90176-4
Spectrum of right-sided infective endocarditis: an Indian experience
Abstract
We studied retrospectively 23 consecutive patients seen at our centre with right heart endocarditis. None of the patients had a history of intravenous drug abuse. All patients were found to have underlying congenital heart disease as a predisposing factor, of which ventricular septal defect (26%) and Fallot's tetralogy (26%) were the commonest. Postoperative endocarditis (26%) also constituted an important clinical subset. Fever (100%) and predominant pulmonary symptoms (69.5%) were the important presenting features. Congestive heart failure was present in 15 patients (65.2%) and predicted an adverse in-hospital outcome. Both the pulmonary and the tricuspid valves were affected equally with presence of vegetations at multiple sites in 10 patients (43.4%). Seven patients (30%) also had concomitant left-sided endocarditis. Medical therapy alone was successful in 15 patients (68.1%) with an overall in-hospital mortality of 31.8%. Five of 6 patients with postoperative endocarditis died, signifying an ominous prognosis of this subgroup when treated medically. The clinical spectrum of right-sided endocarditis in our country differs from the West. The frequent presence of underlying congenital heart disease, the rarity of drug abuse as a predisposing factor, equal involvement of the tricuspid and pulmonary valves and a greater incidence of congestive heart failure are some of these differences.
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