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Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery/Fourth Year

‫ياسر رياض الخناق‬.‫د‬


Infective Endocarditis
Infective endocarditis (IE) is defined as a microbial infection of the
endothelial surface of the heart or heart valves that most often occurs
in proximity to congenital or acquired cardiac defects. Its intracardiac
effects include severe valvular insufficiency, which may lead to
intractable congestive heart failure and myocardial abscesses,
therefore, emphasis has long been directed toward its prevention.

Although bacteria most often cause these diseases, fungi and other
microorganisms may also cause infection; thus, the term infective
endocarditis (IE) is used to reflect this multimicrobial origin.

Classification

IE is classified based on:

❖ The causative microorganism (e.g., streptococcal endocarditis,


staphylococcal endocarditis, candidal endocarditis)
❖ The type of valve that is infected (e.g., native valve endocarditis
[NVE], prosthetic valve endocarditis [PVE]).
❖ The source of infection; whether community acquired or hospital
acquired, or whether the patient is an intravenous (IV) drug user or
not.

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Etiology
✓ Streptococci are the most common cause of IE 30%-65%, of which
streptococci viridans (alpha-hemolytic streptococci), which are
normal constituents of the oral flora and gastrointestinal tract,
remain the most common cause of community acquired NVE.
✓ Staphylococci are the cause of at least 30%-40% of cases of IE;
mostly coagulase-positive Staphylococcus aureus which is the most
common pathogen in IE associated with IV drug abuse, it is also the
most common pathogen in nonvalvular cardiovascular device
infections.
✓ In some recent studies, S. aureus has emerged as the most common
cause of IE and rates of viridans streptococci have decreased.
✓ Other microbial agents that less commonly cause IE such as the
HACEK group (Haemophilus, Actinobacillus, Cardiobacterium,
Eikenella, Kingella), Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Corynebacterium,
Bacteroides fragilis, and fungi.

Predisposing conditions attributed to IE include:


➢ Mitral valve prolapse 25%-30%.
➢ Aortic valve disease 12%-30%.
➢ Congenital heart disease 10%-20%.
➢ Prosthetic valve 10%-30%.
➢ Intravenous drug abuse 5%-20%.
➢ No identifiable condition 25%-47%.

Pathophysiology

IE is thought to be the result of a series of complex interactions of


several factors involving endothelium, bacteria, and the host immune
response. The sequences of events include:
1. Injury or damage to an endothelial surface, most often of a cardiac
valve leaflet.
2. Fibrin and platelets then adhere to the roughened endothelial
surface and form small clusters or masses called nonbacterial
thrombotic endocarditis (NBTE), these masses are sterile and do not
contain microorganisms.
3. With the occurrence of a transient bacteremia, bacteria can be
seeded into and adhere to the mass.
4. Additional platelets and fibrin are then deposited onto the surface of
the mass, which serves to protect the bacteria that undergo rapid
multiplication within the protection of the vegetative mass.
5. The clinical outcome results from:
• Local destructive effects of intracardiac (valvular) lesions.
• Embolization of vegetative fragments to distant sites, resulting in
infarction or infection.
• Hematogenous seeding of remote sites during continuous
bacteremia

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• Antibody response to the infecting organism with subsequent
tissue injury caused by deposition of preformed immune
complexes or antibody/complement interaction with antigens
deposited in tissues.

Signs and symptoms

The clinical presentation may be varied; the interval between the


presumed initiating bacteremia and the onset of symptoms of IE is
estimated to be less than 2 weeks in more than 80% of patients.
✓ Fever (most common).
✓ Heart murmur.
✓ Petechiae of the palpebral conjunctiva, the buccal and palatal
mucosa, and extremities.
✓ Osler's nodes (small, tender, subcutaneous nodules that develop in
the pulp of the digits). Named after Sir William Osler (1849-1919).
They are caused by immune-complex deposition.
✓ Janeway lesions (small, erythematous or hemorrhagic, macular
nontender lesions on the palms and soles). Named after Edward
Janeway (1841-1911). They are caused by septic emboli which
deposit bacteria, forming micro-abscesses of the dermis with
marked necrosis and inflammatory infiltrate not involving the
epidermis.
✓ Splinter hemorrhages in the nail beds
✓ Roth spots (oval retinal hemorrhages with pale centers). Caused by
immune complex mediated vasculitis. Named after Moritz Roth, a
Swiss Pathologist (1839-1914).
✓ Splenomegaly
✓ Clubbing of the digits.
✓ Positive blood cultures in most cases. Although up to 30% of cases
of IE are initially found to be “culture negative,” especially in patients
who have taken antibiotics prior to the diagnosis of IE.

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Diagnosis

Duke criteria were developed to facilitate diagnosis of IE. These criteria


are categorized as major and minor.
❖ Major criteria:
➢ Positive blood cultures.
➢ Evidence of endocardial involvement (e.g., positive
echocardiography, presence of new valvular regurgitation.
❖ Minor criteria:
➢ Predisposing heart condition or IV drug use.
➢ Fever.
➢ Vascular phenomena, including embolic events.
➢ Immunologic phenomena.
➢ Microbiologic evidence other than positive blood culture.
Definitive diagnosis of IE requires the presence of two major criteria,
one major and three minor criteria, or five minor criteria.

Complications

• Heart failure as a result of severe valvular dysfunction.


• Embolization of vegetation fragments leads to stroke, MI, pulmonary
embolism. Emboli also may involve other systemic organs, including
the liver, spleen, kidney, and abdominal mesenteric vessels.
• Renal dysfunction is also common and may be due to immune
complex glomerulonephritis or infarction.

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Medical Management
Generally, it consists of antibiotics and surgery. The most widely used
antibiotics include penicillin, ceftriaxone, gentamicin and vancomycin
while most staphylococcus aureus organisms that produce
betalactamase respond to nafcillin and oxacillin and for strains
resistant to oxacillin, vancomycin is combined with rifampin and
gentamicin.

Surgical intervention may be necessary to facilitate a cure for IE or to


repair damage caused by the infection.

Dental management
➢ The dentist should identify from history taking those patients with
cardiac conditions that increase risk for IE and should remain alert
and refer the patient with signs or symptoms of IE to physician. This
would apply whether or not the patient has received prophylactic
antibiotics for dental procedures.

➢ The basic assumption is that IE is most often due to a bacteremia


that results from an invasive dental procedure, and that through the
administration of antibiotics prior to those procedures, IE could be
prevented. But studies have shown that bacteremia can also result
from many normal daily activities such as tooth brushing, flossing,
using toothpicks, using oral water irrigation devices, and chewing
emphasizing the need to maintain good oral hygiene and eradicating
dental/oral disease for decreasing the frequency of bacteremia
produced by normal daily activities.

➢ Cardiac Conditions Associated with the Highest Risk of Adverse


Outcome from Endocarditis for which Prophylaxis with Dental
procedures is recommended:
1. Prosthetic cardiac valve
2. Previous infective endocarditis
3. Congenital heart disease (CHD)
✓ Unrepaired cyanotic CHD, including those with palliative shunts
and conduits.
✓ Completely repaired CHD with prosthetic material or device by
surgery or catheter intervention during the first 6 months after
the procedure. Prophylaxis is reasonable because
endothelialization of prosthetic material occurs within 6 months
after the procedure.

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✓ Repaired CHD with residual defects at the site or adjacent to the
site of a prosthetic patch or prosthetic device, which inhibits
endothelialization
4. Cardiac transplantation recipients who develop cardiac
valvulopathy.

➢ IE antibiotic prophylaxis is recommended only for patients listed


above who undergo any dental procedure that involves the
manipulation of gingival tissues or the periapical region of a tooth
and for those procedures that perforate the oral mucosa.

➢ The following procedures and events do not need prophylaxis:


routine anesthetic injections through noninfected tissue,
restorative dentistry, taking dental radiographs, placement of
removable prosthodontic or orthodontic appliances, adjustment
of orthodontic appliances, placement of orthodontic brackets,
shedding of deciduous teeth, suture removal, fluoride treatment
and bleeding from trauma to the lips or oral mucosa.

➢ Antibiotic prophylaxis regimens

Regimen: Single dose 30-60


Situation Agent Minutes before Procedure
Adult Child
Oral Amoxicillin 2g 50 mg/kg

Ampicillin 2g IM or IV 50 mg/kg
Unable to take oral IM or IV
medication Cefazolin or 1 g IM or IV 50 mg/kg
Ceftriaxone IM or IV
Cephalexin 2g 50 mg/kg

Allergic to Penicillins or Clindamycin 600 mg 20 mg/kg


Ampicillin Oral
Azithromycin or 500 mg 15 mg/kg
Clarithromycin
Cefazolin or 1 g IM or IV 50 mg/kg
Allergic to Penicillins or Ceftriaxone IM or IV
Ampicillin and cannot
Clindamycin 600 mg 20 mg/kg
take oral medications
IM or IV IM or IV

Cephalosporins should not be used in an individual with a history of


anaphylaxis, angioedema, or urticaria with penicillins or ampicillin.

➢ Preoperative use of 0.2% Chlohexidine mouth washes is


advisable.

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➢ In patients who are already taking penicillin or amoxicillin for
eradication of an infection or for long-term secondary prevention
of rheumatic fever are likely to have streptococcus viridans that
are relatively resistant to penicillin or amoxicillin. Therefore:
✓ Clindamycin, azithromycin, or clarithromycin should be
selected for prophylaxis if treatment is immediately necessary.
Cephalosporins should be avoided because of cross resistance.
✓ An alternative approach is to wait for at least 10 days after
completion of antibiotic therapy before administering
prophylactic antibiotics. In this case, the usual regimen can
be used.

➢ In case of prolonged dental procedures (longer than 6 hours) it is


advisable to administer an additional prophylactic dose (same
dose).

➢ Prior to cardiac valve surgery or replacement or repair of


congenital heart disease, it is recommended that preoperative
dental evaluation be performed and necessary dental treatment
provided whenever possible in an effort to decrease the incidence
of late PVE caused by viridans group streptococci.

Rheumatic fever and rheumatic heart disease


Rheumatic fever is an autoimmune inflammatory process that develops
after pharyngeal infection with group A beta-hemolytic streptococci
(streptococcus pyogenes). It predominantly affects children between 5-
15 years. Rheumatic fever may occasionally be followed by chronic
rheumatic carditis with permanent cardiac valvular damage that
appears to be immunologically mediated tissue damage, which may
lead to fibrosis and distortion of the cardiac valves (chronic rheumatic
heart disease).

Clinical manifestations
The clinical manifestations of acute rheumatic fever are so variable that
the diagnosis is made only if at least two of the major criteria are fulfilled

Diagnostic criteria
Major Minor
Commented [WU1]: Chorea is a movement disorder
Carditis Pyrexia that causes involuntary, irregular, unpredictable muscle
Polyarthritis Arthralgia movements. The disorder can make you look like
Chorea Previous rheumatic fever you're dancing (the word chorea comes from the
Greek word for “dance”) or look restless or
Erythema marginatum Raised ESR and C-reactive protein fidgety. Chorea is a movement problem that occurs in
Subcutaneous nodules Characteristic ECG changes many different diseases and conditions.

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➢ A sore throat may be followed after about 3 weeks by an acute febrile
illness with multiple joints pain (migratory arthralgia) which heals
without permanent damage in about 3 weeks.
➢ Cerebral involvement causing spasmodic involuntary movements
(Sydenham chorea, St. Vitus dance).
➢ A characteristic rash (erythema marginatum).
➢ Lung involvement
➢ Subcutaneous nodules (usually around the elbows).
➢ The most serious cardiac complication is subendocardial
inflammation, particularly along the lines of closure of the mitral and
aortic valve cusps, resulting in the formation of fibrinous vegetations
and later scarring, fibrotic stiffening and distortion of the heart
valves, often causing mitral valve and/or aortic valve stenosis. This
is essentially a mechanical, hemodynamic disorder, in which the
defective valves may become infected at any time, leading to infective
endocarditis. Cardiac failure can develop, often after many years.

Medical management

✓ Prompt antimicrobial treatment of streptococcal sore throat (within


24 hours of onset) prevents the development of rheumatic fever in
most cases.
✓ After an attack of rheumatic carditis, there is a risk of recurrence
and continuous antibiotic prophylaxis becomes necessary to lessen
the risk of permanent cardiac damage. The drug of choice is usually
oral phenoxymethyl penicillin until the age of 20. For those allergic
to penicillin, sulfadimidine should be given.

Dental management

➢ Acute rheumatic fever patients are exceedingly unlikely to be seen


during an attack but emergency dental treatment may be necessary.
➢ Patients with history of rheumatic fever but without cardiac
involvement are treated as a normal person.
➢ Most patients with chronic rheumatic heart diseases are
anticoagulated and they should be managed after determining their
prothrombin time and INR and the treatment can be done under
local anesthesia with vasoconstrictor in consultation with the
physician. Conscious sedation with nitrous oxide may be given if
cardiac function is good and with the approval of the physician.
➢ Indications for prophylactic antibiotics are only for the high risk
patients mentioned in the dental management of IE.

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Congenital heart diseases
Congenital heart diseases (CHD) are the most common type of cardiac
diseases present in children. They can broadly be classified as Cyanotic
and Acyanotic (non-cyanotic).

❖ Cyanotic CHDs
The cyanosis results from shunting of deoxygenated blood from the
right ventricle into the left side of the heart and the systemic circulation
(right to left shunt) leading to chronic hypoxemia, they include:
✓ Eisenmenger syndrome (Named after Victor Eisenmenger who
described this condition in 1897).
✓ Fallot's tetralogy (Named after the French physician Etienne-
Louis-Arthur Fallot 1850-1911).
✓ Pulmonary atresia.
✓ Pulmonary valve stenosis.
✓ Total anomalous venous drainage.
✓ Transposition of great vessels.
✓ Tricuspid atrasia.
Patients may crouch to improve venous return, but eventually
polycythemia with hemorrhagic and thrombotic tendencies develop,
finger and toe clubbing develops but after 3 months of age. If untreated,
40% of patients with cyanotic CHD die within 5 years.

❖ Acyanotic CHDs

They are further divided into those with no shunt like; Aortic stenosis,
bicuspid aortic valve, coarctation of the aorta, dextrocardia and mitral
valve prolapse. The other division of the Acyanotic CHD is those
diseases with left to right shunt and these include; Atrial septal defects
(ASD), Ventricular septal defects (VSD) and patent ductus arteriosus
(PDA).
Some CHD start as Acyanotic diseases and become cyanotic with time.
Most of these cardiac defects are well tolerated in utero, and it is only
after birth that their anatomic and hemodynamic abnormalities become
evident.
CHD is most commonly diagnosed through echocardiography, and
confirmed by cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Early
correction of the congenital defect, often by transvenous catheter
techniques, is the treatment of choice. More complex defects may
require an operation. Medical treatment may be needed for the
management of pulmonary edema, heart failure, polycythemia,
infection or emotional disturbances.
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Modern surgical and medical care helps children survive into adult life
and patients are then often called adult or ‘grown-up’ CHD.
Nevertheless, complications observed in adults who were previously
thought to have had successful repair of CHD include arrhythmias,
valve disorders and cardiac failure, and residual defects can still
predispose to complications such as infective endocarditis.

Dental management
➢ The most important aspect for dentists to consider is how well the
patient’s heart condition is compensated. Consultation with the
physician is recommended.
➢ Patients with heart disease should take their medications as usual
on the day of the dental procedure, and should bring all their
medications to the dental office for review at the time of the first
appointment.
➢ Patients with stable heart disease receiving atraumatic treatment
under local anesthesia can receive treatment.
➢ Late morning or early afternoon appointments are advisable.
➢ Stress-reduction and good analgesia should be provided.
➢ Limited use of vasoconstrictor with aspirating syringes.
➢ Retraction cords containing adrenalin should be avoided.
➢ Conscious sedation preferably with nitrous oxide can be given with
the approval of the physician. General anesthesia should only be
provided by expert anesthetists in hospital.
➢ Bleeding tendencies due to platelet dysfunction or coagulation
defects should be evaluated and managed accordingly.
➢ There may be susceptibility to infective endocarditis, so prophylactic
antibiotics should be used in the following cases:
✓ Unrepaired cyanotic CHD, including those with palliative shunts and
conduits
✓ Completely repaired CHD with prosthetic material or device by
surgery or catheter intervention during the first 6 months after the
procedure. Prophylaxis is reasonable because endothelialization of
prosthetic material occurs within 6 months after the procedure.
✓ Repaired CHD with residual defects at the site or adjacent to the site
of a prosthetic patch or prosthetic device, which inhibits
endothelialization.
➢ Prior to cardiac valve surgery or replacement or repair of congenital
heart disease, it is recommended that preoperative dental evaluation
be performed and necessary dental treatment provided whenever
possible in an effort to decrease the incidence of late PVE caused by
viridans group streptococci.

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Oral manifestations

• Delayed eruption of both dentitions


• Enamel hypoplasia; the teeth often have a bluish-white ‘skimmed
milk’ appearance and there is gross vasodilatation in the pulps
• Greater caries and periodontal disease activity, probably because of
poor oral hygiene and lack of dental attention
• After cardiac surgery, transient small white non-ulcerated mucosal
lesions of unknown etiology may appear.

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