Abstract
BackgroundAdvanced aortic valve infective endocarditis (IE) with progression and destruction beyond the valve cusps—invasive IE—is incompletely characterized. This study aimed to characterize further the invasive disease extent, location, and stage and correlate macroscopic operative findings with microscopic disease patterns and progression. MethodsA total of 43 patients with invasive aortic valve IE were prospectively enrolled from August 2017 to July 2018. Of these patients, 23 (53%) had prosthetic valve IE, 2 (5%) had allograft IE, and 18 (42%) had native aortic valve IE. Surgical findings and intraoperative photography were analyzed for invasion location, extent, and stage. Surgical samples were formalin fixed and analyzed histologically. The time course of disease and management were evaluated. ResultsPathogens included Staphylococcus aureus in 17 patients (40%). Invasion predominantly affected the non–left coronary commissure (76%) and was circumferential in 15 patients (35%) (14 had prosthetic valves). Extraaortic cellulitis was present in 29 patients (67%), abscess in 13 (30%), abscess cavity in 29 (67%), and pseudoaneurysm in 8 (19%); 7 (16%) had fistulas. Histopathologic examination revealed acute inflammation, abscess formation, and lysis of connective tissue but not of myocardium or elastic tissue. Median time from onset of symptoms to antibiotics was 5 days, invasion confirmation 15 days, and surgery 37 days. Patients with S aureus had a 21-day shorter time course than patients non–S aureus. New or worsening heart block developed in 8 patients. ConclusionsAdvanced invasive aortic valve IE demonstrates consistent gross patterns and stages correlating with histopathologic findings. Invasion results from a confluence of factors, including pathogen, time, and host immune response, and primarily affects the fibrous skeleton of the heart and expands to low-pressure regions.
Published Version
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have