In a population of 930,000 inhabitants all records of native valve infective endocarditis diagnosed in the decade 1980-89 were reviewed. Using strict case definitions 132 clinically well-defined or post-mortem diagnosed cases were found. Included were cases referred to the local department of cardiology, as well as cases treated in non-specialized departments. Of 132 cases found 23 were only diagnosed post mortem. The male/female ratio was 71/61. The median prehospital duration of symptoms was 20 days (range 0-180 days) and the median in-hospital diagnostic delay was 5 days (range 0-54 days). Known cardiac disease was found in 42% of cases, a possible portal of entry was found in 33%, but in 36% there were no predisposing factors. Remarkably, only two patients had known rheumatic heart disease and none had a known dental focus. During the clinical course 55% experienced cardiac failure and 17% embolic episodes. In 19 patients surgery was required. Of 111 culture-positive cases streptococci were found in 61 and staphylococci in 45 cases. Echocardiography was performed in 95 cases with echocardiographic signs of endocarditis in 65 patients. Overall mortality was 33% with a mortality in clinically diagnosed cases of 18%. Of 14 cases needing immediate surgical intervention, two died.
ABSTRACT. The diagnosis of pulmonary embolism was established during a 6‐year period in 284 patients hospitalized in medical departments of a general hospital. Of the 183 patients who died, 178 were autopsied. A retrospective study was performed on the autopsy‐verified fatal cases to correlate their clinical state to relevant postmortem findings. Two groups made thorough, independent evaluations of data from the medical and pathological records. In 95% of the patients a confirmed fatal pulmonary embolism constituted only a slight modification of life expectancy, because of concomitant complicating, severe, terminal disease. Reflecting this poor clinical state, only 26 patients (15%) had a diagnosis of pulmonary embolism premortally and of these patients, 13 died within 5 hours after onset of symptoms and 10 were treated with antithrombotic drugs. Our results seem to indicate an increase in the incidence of terminal diseases in the popultaion of elderly, hospitalized patients and change the concept of fatal pulmonary embolism into an agonal incident in a terminal‐care medical patient.
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