In a retrospective analysis of bacterial endocarditis, 84 of 192 cases (44%) were found to have musculoskeletal manifestations of one or more types. Common manifestations were arthralgias (32 cases), arthritis (26 cases), low back pain (24 cases), diffuse myalgia (16 cases), and myalgias localized to the thigh or calf (11 cases). The joint manifestations typically were monarticular or oligoarticular, and the myalgias were commonly unilateral. No association was found between the pattern of rheumatic symptoms and other clinical manifestations, laboratory tests, or causative bacterial organisms. In 52 patients (27%), musculoskeletal complaints were the first or among the first symptoms of bacterial endocarditis. The frequency and character of these manifestations and their tendency to occur early in the course of the disease indicate that they are an important feature of endocarditis which, if not recognized, may cause a delay in the diagnosis by mimicking a rheumatic disease.
Among 52 cases of prosthetic valve endocarditis, adequate anticoagulant therapy was administered in 38 and discontinued or given in subtherapeutic dosage in 14. Our data suggest that anticoagulant therapy does not appreciably increase morbidity or mortality in patients with prosthetic valve endocarditis. On the contrary, in our patients the incidence of major clinical CNS (central nervous system) complications was increased and the mortality was higher if anticoagulant therapy was discontinued. CNS complications occurred in 10 of the 14 patients without adequate anticoagulant therapy and in three of the 38 with adequate anticoagulant therapy. Mortality was 57% among those treated without adequate anticoagulation and 47% among those with adequate anticoagulation. At autopsy, CNS complications were thought to be the primary cause of five of the eight deaths in cases without adequate anticoagulation.
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