Abstract

Abstract Background Infective endocarditis is still a serious and deadly disease. Despite improvements in its management, the diagnosis it is not always easy and thus it is still associated with high mortality and severe complications. This is especially true for patients with prosthetic valves, that have higher risk of developing infective endocarditis and more often associated with severe complications and a higher rate of mortality. Case Description A 75–years–old woman presented to the ED for persistent low–grade fever and mild dyspnoea. She had an aortic biologic prosthetic valve implanted the year before for severe aortic stenosis. She also complained a persistent back pain, present for about three months and irresponsive to pharmacological therapy and also physiotherapy. Getting back in time, she had been hospitalized few months before for genitourinary tract infection from multi–resistant E. faecalis, treated with antibiotic therapy and then discharged after few days. She underwent a transthoracic echocardiogram in ED that showed an apparently intraprosthetic moderate aortic regurgitation, never described in the previous cardiologic controls. In the strong suspect of endocarditis complicated by systemic embolization, she also underwent transoesophageal echocardiography, that showed dehiscence of the prosthetic valve with severe paravalvular abscess and regurgitation, without rocking motion of the prosthesis. A TC scan and then a spine MRI confirmed the presence of infectious spondylodiscitis, responsible for that persistent back pain. The patient was therefore urgently sent to cardiac surgery: a Bentall procedure (aortic valve and aortic root replacement) was performed. The patient, despite the severity of the sepsis and the cardiac endocarditis, survived the surgery and after 3 weeks of intensive care hospitalization was discharged and sent back to our Department for Cardiac Rehabilitation. Entering the ward, the patient was severely deconditioned, but after about 45 days of hospitalization she was discharged fit, with good functional capacity. Conclusion This case shows the subtle but serious evolution that usually controlled infections can have in patients with high risk of endocarditis, as patients with prosthetic valves. This underlines on one hand the importance of antibiotic prophylaxis in this subset of patients, on the other hand the role of multimodality imaging for diagnosis and management of infective endocarditis and its complications.

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