Brucella endocarditis is an uncommon focal complication of brucellosis. Presented here are 11 cases of Brucella endocarditis, all managed uniformly. The median duration of symptoms prior to diagnosis was 3 months. Five patients (45%) had underlying valvular damage, and in six (55%) endocarditis involved a normal valve. There was a predominance of aortic involvement (82%) and a high incidence of left ventricular failure (91%). Diagnostic suspicion was essential in order to test blood cultures correctly, which in this series were positive in 63% of the patients. Surgical treatment was undertaken in eight patients (72%), all with aortic involvement and left ventricular failure impossible to control with medication. One patient died during the immediate postoperative period. All the other patients received antibiotic therapy for 3 months, with no signs of relapse of the infection or malfunction of the prosthesis during a minimum follow-up period of 24 months.
Aorto-cavitary fistulous tract formation is an uncommon but extremely serious complication of IE. In-hospital mortality was exceptionally high despite aggressive management with surgical intervention in the majority of patients. Prosthetic IE, urgent surgery, and the development of HF identify the subgroup of patients with IE and ACF that have significantly increased risk of in-hospital death.
In order to evaluate the diagnostic yield of a PCR assay for patients with focal complications of brucellosis, we studied by PCR and by conventional microbiological techniques 34 nonblood samples from 32 patients with different focal forms of brucellosis. The samples from patients with brucellosis were paired to an equal number of control samples from the same locations of patients whose illnesses had different etiologies. Thirty-three of the 34 nonblood samples (97%) from the brucellosis patients were positive by PCR, whereas Brucella spp. were isolated from only 29.4% of the conventional cultures. For 11.4% of the patients, the confirmatory serological tests were either negative or showed titers below the diagnostic range. Two patients (6.2%) from the control group, both with tuberculous vertebral osteomyelitis, had a positive PCR result. The brucella PCR of blood from these two patients was also positive, and the two strains of Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolated were analyzed by the brucella PCR, with no evidence of amplification. These results show that the PCR assay is far more sensitive than conventional cultures, and this, coupled with its speed and reduction in risk to laboratory workers, makes this technique a very useful tool for the diagnosis of focal complications of brucellosis.
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