Abstract

BackgroundCerebrovascular complications (CVCs) frequently occur in patients with acute infective endocarditis (IE). The aim of this study is to describe the clinical findings of CVCs and to evaluate the impact of CVCs on long-term mortality in patients with IE.MethodsWe retrospectively analyzed 144 patients who fulfilled the modified Duke’s criteria for definite left-sided IE. CVCs were classified into minor (silent cerebral embolism, TIA and stroke with an initial modified Rankin scale ≤ 2) or major (an initial modified Rankin scale ≥ 3) CVCs. Cox proportional hazards model was used for mortality analysis. Hazard ratio (HR) and 95% confidence interval (CI) were obtained.ResultsThe mean age of the 144 patients (96 males and 48 females) was 49.1 years (range 6-85 years). A CVC was found in 37 (25.7%) patients. Of these, 25 were treated with surgical therapy. The patients who underwent early surgery within 2 weeks after stroke had a statistical trend toward a higher risk of postoperative brain hemorrhage (50% versus 4.8%, P = 0.057 by Fisher exact test). The minor CVC group had a similar risk of death as the no-CVC group (P = 0.803; HR 0.856; CI 0.253-2.894), whereas the major CVC group had a higher mortality (P = 0.013; HR 2.865; CI 1.254-6.548) than the no-CVC group. In the multivariate analysis, major CVC (P = 0.002; HR 3.893; CI 1.649-9.194) was a significant predictor of mortality in IE patients, together with advanced age (P = 0.005; HR 3.138; CI 1.421-6.930) and prosthetic valve IE (P = 0.008; HR 2.819; CI 1.315-6.044).ConclusionsIE can give rise to various forms of CVC, most frequently, acute ischemic brain lesions. In our study, major CVC was associated with high risk of mortality although total CVC was not significantly related to the risk of death in patients with IE.

Highlights

  • Cerebrovascular complications (CVCs) frequently occur in patients with acute infective endocarditis (IE)

  • Streptococci including viridans species were the most common micro-organisms (42 patients, 29.2%). 77 patients (53.5%) underwent brain imaging (CT or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)) and 37 (25.7%) were confirmed as having acute brain lesions that were comparable to CVCs

  • The minor CVC group had a similar risk of death as the no-CVC group (P = 0.803; Hazard ratio (HR) 0.856; confidence interval (CI) 0.253-2.894), whereas the major CVC group had a significantly higher mortality (P = 0.013; HR 2.865; CI 1.254-6.548) than the no-CVC group

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Summary

Introduction

Cerebrovascular complications (CVCs) frequently occur in patients with acute infective endocarditis (IE). The aim of this study is to describe the clinical findings of CVCs and to evaluate the impact of CVCs on long-term mortality in patients with IE. Cerebrovascular complications (CVCs) frequently occur in patients who are in the active stage of infective endocarditis (IE), and result from cerebral septic embolization of an endocardial vegetation. They include stroke, transient ischemic attack (TIA) and silent cerebral embolism (SCE). We attempted to (1) describe the incidence, lesion type and neurologic outcome of CVCs, (2) identify the variables determining the occurrence of CVCs and (3) elucidate the impact of types of CVCs on long-term mortality in patients with IE

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