2004
DOI: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehi034
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Aorto-cavitary fistulous tract formation in infective endocarditis: clinical and echocardiographic features of 76 cases and risk factors for mortality

Abstract: Aorto-cavitary fistulous tract formation is an uncommon but extremely serious complication of IE. In-hospital mortality was exceptionally high despite aggressive management with surgical intervention in the majority of patients. Prosthetic IE, urgent surgery, and the development of HF identify the subgroup of patients with IE and ACF that have significantly increased risk of in-hospital death.

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Cited by 209 publications
(97 citation statements)
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“…300 Periannular extension is common, occurring in 10% to 40% of all NVE and complicating aortic IE more commonly than mitral or tricuspid IE. [301][302][303][304] Periannular infection is of even greater concern with PVE, occurring in 56% to 100% of patients. 298,302 Perivalvular abscesses are particularly common with prosthetic valves because the annulus, rather than the leaflet, is the usual primary site of infection, especially in early PVE and on bioprosthetic valves.…”
Section: Periannular Extension Of Infectionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…300 Periannular extension is common, occurring in 10% to 40% of all NVE and complicating aortic IE more commonly than mitral or tricuspid IE. [301][302][303][304] Periannular infection is of even greater concern with PVE, occurring in 56% to 100% of patients. 298,302 Perivalvular abscesses are particularly common with prosthetic valves because the annulus, rather than the leaflet, is the usual primary site of infection, especially in early PVE and on bioprosthetic valves.…”
Section: Periannular Extension Of Infectionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Persistent bacteremia or fever, recurrent emboli, heart block, heart failure, or a new pathological murmur in a patient with IE on appropriate antibiotics may suggest extension. 303 Only aortic valve involvement and current IDU have been prospectively identified as independent risk factors for perivalvular abscess. 297 On ECG, new atrioventricular block has a positive predictive value of 88% for abscess formation but low (45%) sensitivity.…”
Section: Periannular Extension Of Infectionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…On both TTE and TEE, paravalvular extension may be detected when a complication like abscess or fistula occurs (22)(23)(24). Fortunately, in the current study it was possible to detect the paravalvular extension of the infection by MRI, depicting delayed contrast enhancement on the paravalvular tissues in six patients before complications arose (Figs.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 56%
“…Perforation or fistula formation can represent sequelae of uncontrolled infection from either periannular extension or abscess formation. [4] TEE identified the perforation but failed to detect the mural abscess found intraoperatively showing the limitations of these imaging studies.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 94%