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Risk of recurrence after reoperation for prosthetic valve endocarditis.
32
Citations
10
References
1997
Year
Heart FailureCardiac AnaesthesiaSurgeryClinical EpidemiologySepsisValve DiseaseDrug AddictionPublic HealthConstrictive PericarditisCardiologyActive PvePerioperative CareProsthetic Valve EndocarditisCardiovascular DiseaseSurgical ProcedurePatient SafetyThoracic SurgeryValvular Heart DiseaseMedicineEmergency MedicineAnesthesiology
Reoperation after a surgical procedure for prosthetic valve endocarditis (PVE) is often required due to the existence of either septic recurrence or sterile para-prosthetic leak (PL). The aim of this study was to assess the risk to patients of undergoing a second operation after PVE. Thirty-six patients underwent operation for active PVE at our institution. The operative mortality rate was 11.2%. Among the 32 patients discharged, six underwent a second operation (in two cases due to persisting sepsis) and two underwent a third procedure. Multivariate analysis demonstrated increased probability of further operation for: inability to identify the infecting organism (p = 0.005); drug addiction (p = 0.007); existence of annular abscess (p = 0.016); and early occurrence of PVE (p = 0.018). In the case of mechanical prostheses, PVE was not an independent risk factor (p = 0.206). Nonetheless, 58.3% of patients with mechanical prostheses compared with 5.3% of those with bioprostheses showed annular abscesses, while 41.7% of the former versus 5.6% of the latter suffered one or more recurrences.
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