Infective Endocarditis
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- Опубліковано 6 сер 2024
- Table of Contents:
00:15 - Anatomy and Physiology of the Endocardium
01:23 - Infective Endocarditis: Definition
02:29 - High Risk Group
03:58 - Ineffective Endocarditis: Pathophysiology
06:57 - Let's comprehend the manifestations
08:19 - Ineffective Endocarditis
08:31 - Splinter Hemorrhages
08:47 - Osler's Nodes
09:12 - Janeway's lesions
09:42 - Roth's spots
09:55 - Ineffective Endocarditis: Hx. and PA
11:03 - Ineffective Endocarditis: Diagnostic Studies
12:20 - Ineffective Endocarditis: Echocardiogram
12:57 - Ineffective Endocarditis: Blood Culture
14:24 - Ineffective Endocarditis: Other Tests
14:54 - Ineffective Endocarditis: Medical Management
16:29 - Ineffective Endocarditis: Nursing Considerations
17:57 - Ineffective Endocarditis: Nursing Considerations - Навчання та стиль
Thank you for taking the time to present this. I needed to know more after seeing a girl that contracted this from heroin use. Addicts need to know about their risk of contracting this disease because it is terrifying... RIP Brooke...
Thanks for posting this you cannot believe how this has saved my life for my midterm coming up
The explanation is so clear it's so easy to understand! Thank you so very very much!
جزاك الله كل خير دكتور حقيقي ممتاز
Thank you very much! your explanation was very interesting and helpful!! I like you kept it simple and did not go to useless details.
thanks Dr for the clear and simple explanation!
Thank you so much Mr.Khaled
This video was very helpful. I like the fact that It's simple and to the point.
Thank you so much! you helped understand and grasp the topic better.
Wow! Very clear concepts explained under 20 minutes. Thank you ver much sir.
May God bless you
Thanks so much for the video. very detailed and helpful
I have had this infection, thanks to the AHA,the doctors took care of me at Washington Hospital Center. Very helpful information.
VERY SIMPLE AND EASY TO UNDERSTAND LECTURE!
جزاك الله خير … جميل جدًا
Nice video. to the point and precise one
Great video,thank you.
Found a neighbours cat in my garage and received a super cat scratch in late 2012. By March 2013 I was fighting for my life with infection in my body. This attacked my joints and cartilidge in my lower back. The infection was isolated in an aortic graft which had been inserted in 2008 after suffering aortic dissection affecting the ascending and descending aorta and aortic root. It is still present and throws off signs of Endocarditis. If you are a student reading this, the condition which has not affected the endocardium, is seated inside the aortic graft. NO antibiotic will attack the staphy bacteria due to its location. Only will it kill it when it breaks off. I still have it and it is being managed by 24 hour antibiotic. Be very aware of this, especially when asked by your teacher!
This is wonderful. Thank you. :)
it was very helpful, thank you.
Thanks man. Quite a good lecture!
very very helpful! Thank you so much :)
Great video!! Thank you
thank u sir its really very helpful in my studies
this is awesome! thank you!
Excellent !
thank you!
Thanks man, great video!
Very good explanation Thank you :-)
شكرا جزيلا
Thanks DR
Very helpful!
Thank you it is simple and easy
ım a med student from turkey and ı found this really good! welldone dr! :)
Really helpful thanks sir
Well done thanx
GREAT !
thanx bro 4 ur great help :D
best lecture ever thanaks Mr Khaled
1d
thanxxxxxxxxx so helpful
great khalid
THANK YOU !
thanks
Great video! Do note: The most common bacterial cause of infective endocarditis worldwide is staphylococcus aureus, not streptococci as is mentioned in the video at 3:14. However, IE caused by viridans streptococci is more common than S. aureus in South America, and in community acquired cases. Murdoch, DR; et al. (9 March 2009)
thank you for this video but i ask if you have videos for other congenital heart disese liake ASD VSD PAPVD & so on
thanks :)
i just came out from hospital yes i had endocordtis from the fuckin drugs i cried a lot when the profs told me maybe yul need an operation in the beging but things improved a lot with antibiotics [FLUXOCISILIN] and after 4 weeks the profs.told me u dont need operation so i became happy i never felt nothing for now thx god i get up the stairs with out shorten my breadthe just a little and my valve is a little eaten cause of infection but i want to make u courage my friends dont worry trust me if u have like me but still no one is the same one thing a piece of infection got off from my valve and went into my lungs so i got an infection in my lungs but nothing serious [nemonia] but i cured in 2 weeks .the worrying part 4 me is will do i need operation when im older? the profs told me 90 % no i will not need and only 4 days the i was in hospital doctors told me traing and eating veg and fruit and cod liver oil will save u antoher thing PLS TRY TO NOT WORRY TOO MUCH ITS AGAINST US OK NO DRUGS OK NO DRINKING OR CIGGARETS I ONLY USE E,LECTRONIC CIGARETS I ASKED MY GOOD PROFS. HE TOLD THAT ITS NOT HARMFUL LISTEN MY FRIEND IF U TAKE GOOD CARE U WILL LIVE A LONG NORMAL LIFE GOD BLESS U ALL I LOVE TO SEE U CURE PLS ANSWER ME TELL ME HOW R U DOING I FORGOT my course on antibiotics was 6 hard long weeks and i still have low blood maybe a scatch with antibiotics i still need a small procegere antoher 3 weeks so pray 4 me pls that i will not suffer or on pain during the procegere cause they need to still an instrument with cam through my mouth into my stomach i dont no if it will hurt im just a little scared but i feel very good normal healthy anyways god bless u all
Wowo!!!!!!!! Thank you
nice work :) subscribed :)
My son had an aortic valve replacement surgery because of this infection. He had the infection after the dental procedure.
Hey! your lecture is great!! but as far as Osler's Nodes and Janeway's Lesions you say exactly the countrary, because the ON are caused from precipitation of immune complexes!!
Tq
great
Thank You so much! But what about rheumatic factor?
Im have endocarditis.. It was dyagnostic by doctor. Cause before im hase congenital heart disease ASD closure... How my next steps?
Thank you so much Dr.
I just want to understand,is there a connection between rheumatic and infective endocarditis??
I have a patient with recurrent tonsillitis (actually he did tonsillectomy) presented-after a period of time-with feeling of heaviness in the chest on exertion plus fever , and vomiting (mildly) ,these clinical features lasted for two months...abruptly he feels left sided limbs weakness (upper and lower)plus paresthesia two days ago.. What do you think the problem is?
Maybe a littlebit late. The rheumatic fever which occurs in about 2- 3 % of patients with a sore throat induced by a special stand of beta-Haemolytic Streptococcus of the A group is influencing several tissues.
The brain, which oeada to chorea huntongton like symptoms, the joints which leads to a migratory polyarthritis and signs in the skin and the subdermal tissue. These four loci will cure after inflammation nearly to restitutio ad integrum. The inflammation of rheumatic fever, similar to a autoimmune disease, is induced because genetical preposition. The antigenes of the bacteria is veryvery similar to the bodies HLa Antigenes. So if there is an inflammation induced by the special streptococcustype mentioned above, the body will also attack the own tissue. In this case clearly also the endocard, myocard and pericard can be attacked. This inflammtion leads in the case of the endocard to buiding of lesions in the contact zone of the heart valves . There the body will build up fibrin fibres. And scar tissue which will lead to a stenosis in the first order. After rheumatic fever is gone the status stays like it is and in the next inflammation with the special antigene carrying streptococcus the process proceeds and the stenosis grows. But also the formerly even valves endocard is getzing rough. That is where the infective endocarditis is taking place. The roughness gives the bacteria a better place to grow and the turbulence behind the valve makes it even easier for them to hold on the endocard. So two factors connect the rheumatic with the infective endocarditis. A thrombkting vegetation can lead to a apoplex.
BUT there are the duke criteria which have to be fulfilled.
Janeway lesions contain organisms (septic micro-emboli) while Osler nodes are localized immune-mediated phenomena.
Nice job!
very clear and concise many thanks....but what is the cause of anaemia in this disease?
412312 122rtyyyop
Duke criteria was incomplete it has minor criteria also
Oh my. My friend is in the hospital now and his wife is so scared.
My son's mother is in the hospital also, I see you posted this 2 years ago. I pray to God that your friend is in great health now!
كنت اتمنى تشرح بالعربي 😢
Images are blurred sir!
Why anemia in infective endocarditis
why everyslide has that part " ineffective"? should be infective as it comes from the infection
I also had this disease
nice jop
Bangla dia Bella Bhalo hoi
Excellent!
thanks