Aspergillus Valve Endocarditis in Patients without Prior Cardiac Surgery
- 1 July 2000
- journal article
- case report
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Medicine
- Vol. 79 (4) , 261-268
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00005792-200007000-00007
Abstract
Aspergillus native valve endocarditis in patients who have not had cardiac surgery is uncommon. We report 3 cases and review 58 other adult patients reported in the English-language literature. Sixty-seven percent of the patients had underlying immunosuppression. The clinical features were fever (74%), embolic episodes (69%), a new or changing heart murmur (41%), and sudden visual loss (13%). Patients with mural endocarditis were more often immunosuppressed, especially due to solid organ transplants, but had lower frequency of heart murmurs and embolic episodes. Echocardiography revealed a vegetation in 78% of all the cases in which it was performed. Examination and culture of biopsy material often helped to establish a diagnosis of Aspergillus infection. Twenty-five patients had an antemortem diagnosis. These patients received a mean cumulative amphotericin B dose of 27 mg/kg. Twenty percent (3/15) of patients who received combined surgical and medical therapy survived, compared to none of those who received medical therapy alone (p = 0.08). Patients who survived were not immunosuppressed. We conclude that native valve aspergillus infective endocarditis is uniformly fatal without surgical intervention and antifungal therapy.Keywords
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