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Specialty: Cardiology
Condition: Septic Shock

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Total 28 results found since Jan 2013.

Pre-operative stroke and neurological disability do not independently affect short- and long-term mortality in infective endocarditis patients
Conclusions Pre-operative stroke and the severity of neurological disability do not independently affect short- and long-term mortality in patients with infective endocarditis. It appears that patients with pre-operative stroke present with a generally higher risk profile. This information may substantially affect decision-making.
Source: Clinical Research in Cardiology - April 26, 2016 Category: Cardiology Source Type: research

Stroke is not a treatment dilemma for early valve surgery in active infective endocarditis.
CONCLUSION: Surgery for AIE with cerebral septic embolisms can be performed safely, with good early and mid-term follow-up results. When urgent or emergent surgery for AIE is needed, neurologic complications should not be a reason for delay. PMID: 25799711 [PubMed - in process]
Source: Journal of Heart Valve Disease - March 25, 2015 Category: Cardiology Tags: J Heart Valve Dis Source Type: research

Po-01-140 atrial fibrillation and septic shock: a five-year retrospective observational study of anticoagulation usage, bleeding and stroke rates
Anticoagulation (AC) for atrial fibrillation (AF) is a cornerstone of management, and the benefit of mitigating stroke risk is accompanied by an increased risk of bleeding. The risk and benefit of AC in septic shock remains unclear as this disruptive hyperinflammatory state leads to multi-organ dysfunction, which can include coagulopathies.
Source: Heart Rhythm - May 1, 2023 Category: Cardiology Authors: Jonathan Na, Joanne Moon, Sahitya Allam, Maria Abraham, Kevin Chen, Ethan Kotloff, Yash Desai, Simin Hossain, Christopher Messner, Elnaz Esmati, Thomas Kutner, Gregory Norcross, James Childress, Paul Han, Ian Welch, Michael Sokolow, Libin Wang, Vincent Se Source Type: research

Clinical – microbiological characterization and risk factors of mortality in infective endocarditis from a tertiary care academic hospital in Southern India
CONCLUSIONS This study reiterates the persistent dominance of rheumatic heart disease in the population studied and α − haemolytic Streptococci as the commonest responsible microorganism.
Source: Indian Heart Journal - August 17, 2017 Category: Cardiology Source Type: research

Clinical - microbiological characterization and risk factors of mortality in infective endocarditis from a tertiary care academic hospital in Southern India.
CONCLUSIONS: This study reiterates the persistent dominance of rheumatic heart disease in the population studied and α - hemolytic Streptococci as the commonest responsible microorganism. PMID: 29716704 [PubMed - in process]
Source: Indian Heart J - March 1, 2018 Category: Cardiology Authors: Subbaraju P, Rai S, Morakhia J, Midha G, Kamath A, Saravu K Tags: Indian Heart J Source Type: research

CardioPulse Articles * Warfarin increases stroke risk in atrial fibrillation * Aspirin still overprescribed for stroke prevention in atrial fibrillation * Clinical Research in Cardiology: the official journal of the German Cardiac Society (Deutsche Gesellschaft fur Herz-/Kreislaufforschung) * Septic shock in infective endocarditis * Innovation in atrial fibrillation therapy
Source: European Heart Journal - June 7, 2014 Category: Cardiology Tags: CardioPulse Source Type: research

Clinical outcomes in patients with native valve infective endocarditis and diabetes mellitus.
CONCLUSION: There is an increasing prevalence of DM in NVIE and it is associated with poorer outcomes. Further studies are crucial to identify the clinical, and sociodemographic contributors to this trend and develop strategies to mitigate its attendant risk. PMID: 33552399 [PubMed]
Source: World Journal of Cardiology - January 26, 2021 Category: Cardiology Authors: Abe T, Eyituoyo HO, De Allie G, Olanipekun T, Effoe VS, Olaosebikan K, Mather P Tags: World J Cardiol Source Type: research

Clinical outcomes in patients with native valve infective endocarditis and diabetes mellitus
CONCLUSION: There is an increasing prevalence of DM in NVIE and it is associated with poorer outcomes. Further studies are crucial to identify the clinical, and sociodemographic contributors to this trend and develop strategies to mitigate its attendant risk.PMID:33552399 | PMC:PMC7821010 | DOI:10.4330/wjc.v13.i1.11
Source: World Journal of Cardiology - February 8, 2021 Category: Cardiology Authors: Temidayo Abe Harry Onoriode Eyituoyo Gabrielle De Allie Titilope Olanipekun Valery Sammah Effoe Kikelomo Olaosebikan Paul Mather Source Type: research