Introduction: Mural infective endocarditis (MIE) is a rare type of endovascular infection. We present a comprehensive series of patients with mural endocarditis. Methods: Patients with infectious endocarditis (IE) from 35 Spanish hospitals were prospectively included in the GAMES registry between 2008 and 2017. MIEs were compared to non-MIEs. We also performed a literature search for cases of MIE published between 1979 and 2019 and compared them to the GAMEs series. Results: Twenty-seven MIEs out of 3676 IEs were included. When compared to valvular IE (VIE) or device-associated IE (DIE), patients with MIE were younger (median age 59 years, p \ 0.01). Transplantation (18.5% versus 1.6% VIE and 2% DIE, p \ 0.01), hemodialysis (18.5% versus 4.3% VIE and 4.4% DIE, p = 0.006),
Purpose: To evaluate preoperative asymptomatic bacteriuria (ASB) treatment on the reduction of earlyperiprosthetic joint infections (early-PJIs) after hip hemiarthroplasty (HHA) for fracture.Methods: Open-label, multicentre RCT comparing 3gr of fosfomycin-trometamol with non-treatment. A parallel follow-up cohort without ASB was established. Primary outcome: early-PJI within 3 months after HHA.Results: patients enrolled (mean age 84.3years); 152(25%) with ASB (77 treated with fosfomycin and 75 controls) and 442(75%) without. ASB was not a predictor of early-PJI (OR:1.06[95%CI:0.33-3.38], p=0,9228) and its treatment did not modify early-PJI incidence (OR
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