Background: Persistent left superior vena cava (PLS VC) is the most common thoracic venous anomaly.Hypothesis: This study examines the epidemiologic, clinical, and morphologic characteristics of a cohort of patients with PLSVC draining into the coronary sinus.Methods: We examined the clinical and morphologic characteristics of patients with PLSVC draining into the coronary sinus diagnosed at a single referral hospital for a defined population in northwestern Spain. We designed a prospective study of the case records of all patients diagnosed with PLSVC draining into the coronary sinus at the echocardiog‐raphy laboratory of the Hospital Xeral‐Calde from January 2001 through December 2002. Patients were included if they had a PLSVC diagnosed by transthoracic echocardiogram (TTE) using an echo‐contrast enhancement and confirmed by a magnetic resonance (MR) imaging. Ten patients (6 women) fulfilled the inclusion criteria described above. All patients were adults and had associated heart disease, including a congenital heart disease in three cases.Results: Magnetic resonance imaging examination confirmed the presence of PLSVC and the site of drainage into the coronary sinus. Absence of the right superior vena cava was observed only in three patients, in whom the main coronary sinus size was significantly increased. Absence of the left bra‐chiocephalic vein was diagnosed in five patients.Conclusion: This study describes 10 new cases of PLSVC and supports the necessity of considering PLSVC draining into the coronary sinus in the diagnosis of patients presenting with dilated coronary sinus diagnosed by TTE. It also underlines the important role of MR imaging in the evaluation of these abnormalities. An associated heart disease must always be excluded in these patients.
Infective endocarditis (IE) is due to a microbial infection of the heart valves or of the endocardium in close proximity to either congenital or acquired cardiac defects. This infection is associated with a high risk of complications. Rheumatic manifestations are known to be frequent complications of IE. Controversy, however, frequently exists about the actual incidence of these complications. This may be due to the small number of series describing the frequency and type of rheumatic manifestations, the absence of uniform criteria used for the diagnosis of IE, and the fact that some studies on rheumatic manifestations in IE have been described from tertiary referral centers, which implicates associated problems of referral bias and uncertainty of denominator population. To investigate further the incidence, clinical spectrum, and outcome of patients with IE and rheumatic manifestations, we examined the features of patients diagnosed with clinically definite IE according to the Duke classification criteria at the single reference hospital for a defined population in northwestern Spain during a 12-year period. Between 1987 and 1998, 100 consecutive patients had 110 episodes of clinically definite IE. Rheumatic manifestations were observed in 46 of the 110 episodes (41.8%). As in other western countries, they occurred more commonly in men aged in their 50s. The most frequent valve involved was the aortic (43.5%) followed by the mitral valve (30.4%). Myalgia was a frequent symptom. Peripheral arthritis, generally as monoarthritis, was clinically evident in 15 cases (13.6%), and sacroiliitis in 1 patient. Low back pain was described in 14 cases (12.7%). Septic discitis was observed in 2 cases, and biopsy-proved cutaneous leukocytoclastic vasculitis was found in 4 cases. Other conditions such as trochanteric bursitis and polymyalgia were observed in 2 and 1 case, respectively. Apart from a significantly higher frequency of hematuria and a trend to lower serum complement levels in patients with rheumatic complications, no differences in clinical features, laboratory tests, or microbiologic blood culture results were found between cases with IE with or without rheumatic manifestations. Also, although patients with rheumatic manifestations had more embolic complications, the inhospital mortality rate in patients with rheumatic manifestations was not significantly different from that of the rest of the patients. The present study supports the claim that rheumatic complications are frequent in patients with clinically definite IE from southern Europe. The presence of musculoskeletal or vasculitic manifestations may be of some help, as warning signs, for the recognition of patients with severe disease who require rapid diagnosis and therapy.
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