Tricuspid valve replacement is not a common operation. The purpose of this study was to examine the early and late results in 60 patients who underwent 28 (47%) bioprosthetic and 32 (53%) mechanical tricuspid valve replacements. All operations took place between January 1978 and June 1993 during which period a total of 4741 patients underwent valve replacement operation. Mean patient age was 50 +/- 15 (18 to 75) years. Forty-one patients (68%) were female and 19 patients (32%) were male. Forty-nine patients (82%) were in New York Heart Association class III or IV before operation. Forty-five patients (75%) were undergoing repeat cardiac valve operation. Seventeen patients (28%) had complex congenital cardiac problems. Operation was urgent in 15 patients (25%). The hospital mortality rate was 27% (16 patients). All patients with hospital death were in New York Heart Association class III or IV, were having repeat operations, or had complex congenital disease. Low output syndrome was observed in 21 patients (35%). Reoperation because of bleeding was required in seven patients (12%). Thirteen patients (22%) required permanent (epicardial lead) pacemaker implantation. Mean follow-up is 75 +/- 45 months (maximum 173 months) and 100% complete for the 44 patients who left the hospital. There have been 14 deaths (32%). Nine of these patients (64%) had mechanical valves and five (36%) had bioprostheses. Of the 11 cardiac deaths, three were valve related (bioprostheses). Three patients (10%) required reoperation because of tricuspid valve prosthetic failure (1 thrombosed mechanical valve, 2 failed porcine valves). Of the remaining 30 patients, 20 (67%) are in New York Heart Association class I or II. Seventeen patients have mechanical valves and 13 have bioprostheses. Twenty-six patients (90%) are receiving warfarin. Thromboembolism (transient ischemic attack) has occurred in one patient with a mechanical valve who also had a previous cerebrovascular accident. In this group there has been no hemorrhage, endocarditis, or new pacemaker requirement. Actuarial survival for the whole series is 37% +/- 9% and for the hospital survivors is 50% +/- 12% at 15 years. Linearized rates of valve-related complications are not different between groups. Tricuspid valve replacement is a beneficial procedure for patients with structural tricuspid valve disease, many of whom have other valvular or congenital disease. Contemporary mechanical prostheses and bioprostheses are equally effective in the tricuspid position. Mechanical valves should be considered for tricuspid replacement in young patients and in patients with mechanical valves implanted in the left side of the heart.
Aims Upon suspicion of infective endocarditis, the causative microorganism must be identified to optimize treatment. Blood cultures and culturing of removed valves are the mainstay of this diagnosis and should be complemented by growth-independent methods. We assessed the diagnostic benefit of examining removed endocarditis valves by broad-range bacterial PCR to detect causative bacteria in cases where culturing was not available, negative, or inconclusive because a skin commensal was detected, in patients from our clinical routine practice. Methods and results Patients from Heidelberg University Hospital with suspicion of endocarditis, followed by valve replacement and analysis by 16S rDNA PCR, between 2015 and 2018, were evaluated. 146 patients with definite infective endocarditis, confirmed by the valve macroscopics and/or histology, were included. Valve PCRs were compared to corresponding blood and valve culture results. Overall, valve PCR yielded an additional diagnostic benefit in 34 of 146 cases (23%) and was found to be more sensitive than valve culture. In 19 of 38 patients with both negative blood and valve cultures, valve PCR was the only method rendering a pathogen. In 23 patients with positive blood cultures detecting skin commensals, 4 patients showed discordant valve PCR results, detecting a more plausible pathogen, and in 11 of 23 cases, valve PCR confirmed commensals in blood culture as true pathogens. Only the remaining 8 patients had negative valve PCRs. Conclusion Valve PCR was found to be a valuable diagnostic tool in surgical endocarditis cases with negative blood cultures or positive blood cultures of unknown significance. Trial registration S-440/2017 on 28.08.2017 retrospectively registered. Graphic abstract Subdividing of all infective endocarditis patients in this study, showing that valve PCR yields valuable information for patients with skin commensals in blood cultures, which were either confirmed by the same detection in valve PCR or refuted by the detection of a different and typical pathogen in valve PCR. Additionally, benefit was determined in patients with negative or not available blood cultures and only positive detection in valve PCR. +: Positive; −: negative; n/a: not available results
Background Therapy with local anesthetics (LAs), also known as neural therapy, is used in integrative medicine because of its anti-inflammatory properties. Ester-linked LAs are often avoided because of their alleged high allergenicity. Little data supports this assumption and hence the importance of our investigation on type-1 allergies against ester- and amide-linked LAs. We performed a prospective, double-blinded, placebo-controlled observational study. Methods 177 patients received 340 intracutaneous injections with 1% procaine, 0.5% lidocaine, 1% mepivacaine, or saline solution. Every patient received two different tests on each forearm. Reactions were monitored for 15 minutes. Results No type-1 allergy was observed. The mean erythema diameter of the wheals after 10 minutes was procaine 8.0 ± 6.4 mm, mepivacaine 7.6 ± 6.3 mm, lidocaine 4.4 ± 4.8 mm, and NaCl 3.7 ± 3.2 mm. The wheal diameter of all substances showed a crescendo-decrescendo phenomenon. The procaine and mepivacaine wheals were significantly larger than those of lidocaine and NaCl. No general signs of hypersensitivity were observed. Diameter and intensity were independent of the injection site, order of injection, age, gender, and body mass index. Conclusion This study shows no higher type-1 allergenicity of the ester-linked LA procaine, compared to the amide-linked LAs lidocaine and mepivacaine, and supports its use in therapy and short-track surgery.
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