FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
All patients
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
Empiric treatment for HSV-1 infection with acyclovir should always be initiated as soon as possible if the patient has encephalitis without apparent explanation to decrease morbidity/mortality
ADDITIONAL READING
- Fitch MT, Abrahamian FM, Moran GJ, et al. Emergency department management of meningitis and encephalitis.
Infect Dis Clin North Am.
2008;22(1):33–52.
- Long SS. Encephalitis diagnosis and management in the real world.
Adv Exp Med Biol.
2011;697:153–173.
- Mandell G.
Mandell, Douglas, and Bennett’s Principles and Practice of Infectious Diseases
. 7th ed. Philadelphia, PA: Churchill Livingstone; 2010.
- Wingfield T, McHugh C, Vas A, et al. Autoimmune encephalitis: A case series and comprehensive review of the literature.
QJM.
2011;104:921–931.
- Ziai WC, Lewin JJ 3rd. Update in the diagnosis and management of central nervous system infections.
Neurol Clin.
2008;26(2):427–468.
See Also (Topic, Algorithm, Electronic Media Element)
Meningitis
CODES
ICD9
- 049.9 Unspecified non-arthropod-borne viral diseases of central nervous system
- 058.29 Other human herpesvirus encephalitis
- 323.9 Unspecified causes of encephalitis, myelitis, and encephalomyelitis
ICD10
- A86 Unspecified viral encephalitis
- B00.4 Herpesviral encephalitis
- G04.90 Encephalitis and encephalomyelitis, unspecified
ENDOCARDITIS
Michael S. Murphy
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
An inflammation of the endothelial surface of the heart
- Various cardiac structures may be involved:
- Native heart valves (most common)
- Prosthetic valves
- Interventricular septum
- Chordae tendineae
- Mural endocardium
- Intracardiac devices
- Characterized by a vegetation (a thrombus with superimposed microorganisms)
- Bacterial colonization of the initially sterile vegetation composed of fibrin and platelets
- Bacterial growth enlarges the vegetation, further impeding blood flow and inciting inflammation.
- Propagation of the infection through systemic emboli
- Almost always secondary to bacterial infection
- Rare noninfectious causes
- Nonbacterial thrombic endocarditis or marantic endocarditis
- Often due to a hypercoagulable state
- Small sterile vegetations
- Libman–Sacks endocarditis
- Complications of lupus erythematosus
- Due to the deposition of immune complexes that cause an inflammatory reaction
- Small vegetations
EPIDEMIOLOGY
- More common in men (ratios from 3.2 to 9.1)
- M: 8.6–12.7 cases/100,000 person-yr
- F: 1.4–6.7 cases/100,000 person-yr
- Risk factors:
- Older patients
- Poor dental hygiene
- Comorbidities
- Rheumatic heart disease
- Prosthetic valve
- Hemodialysis
- Diabetes
- IV drug abuse (IVDA):
- Greater risk than rheumatic heart disease or prosthetic valves
- Predilection for right-sided heart valves
- Septic embolization
- Cerebral complications
- Cerebral embolism
- Intracranial hemorrhage
- Cerebral abscess
- Extracerebral embolic events
- Pulmonary
- Splenic
- Renal
- Mycotic aneurysms (aorta, renal artery, splenic artery, hepatic artery, mesenteric arteries, etc.)
- Hepatic
- Coronary
- Risk factor for recurrent endocarditis:
- Structural heart disease serves as common vegetative site due to altered intracardiac flow:
- Mitral valve prolapse
- Aortic valve dysfunction
- Congenital heart disorders in the pediatric populations:
- Tetralogy of Fallot
- Aortic stenosis
- Patent ductus arteriosus
- Ventricular septal defects
- Aortic coarctation
- Prosthetic valves
- Indwelling catheters
- Any mechanical device may serve as a portal of entry or attachment for microorganisms.
ETIOLOGY
- Major categories:
- Bacterial endocarditis
- Prosthetic valve endocarditis
- Nonbacterial thrombotic endocarditis:
- Malignancy
- Uremia
- Burns
- Systemic lupus erythematosus
- Common organisms:
- Staphylococcus aureus
(most common pathogen):
- Seen in all populations, especially IVDA and toxic illness
- Sometimes metastatic
- Streptococcus viridans
:
- Found in oropharynx, common agent in native valve endocarditis
- Streptococcus bovis
:
- Common association with colonic polyps or GI malignancy
- Streptococcus pneumoniae
:
- Causes rapid valvular destruction, abscess, and CHF
- Risk factor: Alcoholism
- Staphylococcus epidermidis
- Enterococci:
- Seen in young women and old men following instrumentation or infection
- Candida and Aspergillus:
- Found in IVDA, prosthetic valves, or immunocompromised patients
- HACEK (Haemophilus sp.)
- Culture-negative endocarditis (Q fever, psittacosis, Bartonella, brucellosis)
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
- Fever:
- Present in 86% of patients
- May be absent in certain settings:
- Elderly
- CHF
- Severe debility
- Chronic renal failure
- Flulike illness
- Chills
- Sweats
- Rigors
- Malaise
- Head, eyes, ears, nose, and throat:
- Retinal hemorrhages or Roth spots
- Respiratory:
- Dyspnea
- Cough
- Heart failure
- Cardiac:
- A new or changing murmur in 80–85% of patients
- Abdominal:
- Abdominal or back pain
- Splenomegaly (15–50%)
- Extremities:
- Myalgias
- Arthralgias
- Digital clubbing
- Neurologic:
- Altered mental status
- Septic embolization (stroke or mycotic aneurysm)
- Skin:
- Cutaneous vasculitic lesions:
- Mucosal and conjunctival petechiae
- Splinter hemorrhages
- Osler nodes: Erythematous, painful tender nodules
- Janeway lesions: Erythematous or hemorrhagic, macular or nodular lesions, a few millimeters in diameter on the hands and feet
History
- Fever duration and pattern
- Risk factors:
- Prior cardiac disease
- Source of bacteremia:
- Indwelling intravascular catheters
- IV drug use
- Poor dental hygiene
Physical-Exam
- Heart and lung exam:
- New cardiac regurgitant murmur
- Heart failure
- Assess for splenomegaly.
- Assess for septic emboli:
- Fundi, skin, nail beds
- Careful neurologic exam for small focal deficits