Abstract

Infective endocarditis (IE) is a severe infection of the endocardium and cardiac valves by multiple etiologic agents. Clinical presentation can be acute or subacute based on the host immunity and the causative agent’s virulence. Although Streptococci are responsible for most community-acquired native valve bacterial IE, Streptococcus constellatus is an infrequent cause. S. constellatus can rarely infect prosthetic cardiac valves. A middle-aged white male with poorly controlled type 2 diabetes mellitus was transferred to our facility for suspected stroke with an initial presentation of acute encephalopathy of uncertain duration. Transthoracic echocardiogram revealed a left ventricular apical mural vegetation, and brain imaging displayed multiple white matter hypodensities indicative of numerous small strokes. Blood cultures were positive for S. constellatus. Clinical presentation was unusual with an acute encephalopathy due to multiple septic emboli and primary mural IE with high-grade bacteremia due to S. constellatus. PubMed medical literature review reveals this to be a rare clinical presentation by an uncommon etiological agent with an infrequent echocardiogram finding.

Highlights

  • Infective endocarditis (IE) poses diagnostic and management difficulties

  • Clinical presentation was unusual with an acute encephalopathy due to multiple septic emboli and primary mural IE with high-grade bacteremia due to S. constellatus

  • We present a Caucasian male with poorly controlled diabetes mellitus presenting with acute encephalopathy due to multiple septic emboli and primary mural IE due to S. constellatus bacteremia

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Summary

Introduction

Infective endocarditis (IE) poses diagnostic and management difficulties. About 10,000 to 20,000 new cases occur per year in the United States of America [1]. A 54-year-old male with a past medical history of hypertension, hyperlipidemia, type 2 diabetes mellitus, intravenous (IV) drug abuse, Fournier’s gangrene, and recurrent methicillin-resistant Staphylococcal aureus (MRSA) infections presented to an outside hospital with an acute altered mental state and stroke concern. He was last seen 48 hours prior to this. Blood cultures at the outside hospital and our institution returned positive for Grampositive cocci, and a transesophageal echocardiogram (TEE) was ordered He was continued on IV heparin, insulin, and amiodarone drip.

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