Endocarditis terminology

This forum made possible through the generous support of SDN members, donors, and sponsors. Thank you.

Kobebucsfan

Full Member
10+ Year Member
Joined
Apr 20, 2010
Messages
736
Reaction score
16
can someone help with the difference of these terms:

Infective Endocarditis vs. Bacterial Endocarditis vs. Subacute Endocarditis

Members don't see this ad.
 
can someone help with the difference of these terms:

Infective Endocarditis vs. Bacterial Endocarditis vs. Subacute Endocarditis
Infective endocarditis is the most general, 'upstream' term. Bacterial endocarditis is IE...caused by bacterial infection. IE is most often acute and subacute. Acute being Staph aureus on previously normal valves in (usually) IV drug-user; subacute is Strep viridans (mutans/sanguis) on previously abnormal valves (e.g. MVP, congenital HD).

Libman-sacks is SLE on mitral valve and causes MS. 99% of MS is prior RF but 1% is LS. LS is verrucous and on both sides of valve; IE is large, floppy and friable, not necessarily on both sides.

HACEK organisms are culture-negatives and are more just Qbank talking points rather than something the real USMLE actually cares about.

Marantic endocarditis (or non-bacterial thrombotic) is often from malignancy; that creeps into questions and is HY.
 
Top