Infective Endocarditis
Larry M. Baddour, Kathryn A. Taubert, Michael H. Gewitz, and
Walter R. Wilson
19
Introduction
Guidelines for the diagnosis, antimicrobial therapy,
and management of complications of infective
endocarditis
Diagnosis
Echocardiography
Antimicrobial treatment
Complications and their treatment
Surgical therapy
Congestive heart failure
Risk of embolization
Periannular extension of infection
Mycotic aneurysms
Outpatient therapy
Care at completion of treatment
Short-term follow-up
Long-term follow-up
Guidelines for the prevention of infective endocarditis
History of AHA Statements on prevention of IE
Dental procedures and IE
Cardiac conditions and endocarditis
Prophylaxis for dental procedures in patients with
cardiac conditions associated with the highest risk
of adverse outcome from endocarditis
Regimens for respiratory tract procedures
Recommendations for GI or GU tract procedures
Regimens for procedures on infected skin, skin
structure, or musculoskeletal tissue
Introduction
Two sets of guidelines are reviewed in this chapter
and address infective endocarditis (IE). One guide-
line is dedicated to all aspects of endocarditis diag-
nosis and management and was updated in 2005; the
other examines IE prevention and its latest version
was published in 2007.
The writing groups for both guidelines were
charged with the task of performing an assessment
of the evidence and giving a classifi cation of
recommendations and a level of evidence (LOE) to
each recommendation. The American College of
Cardiology (ACC)/American Heart Association
(AHA) classifi cation system was used in each
document. (See table in the front of the book.)
Guidelines for the diagnosis,
antimicrobial therapy,
and management of complications
of infective endocarditis
This work represents the third iteration of an infec-
tive endocarditis “treatment” document developed
by the American Heart Association under the
auspices of the Committee on Rheumatic Fever,
Endocarditis, and Kawasaki Disease, Council on
Cardiovascular Disease of the Young. It updates rec-
ommendations for diagnosis, treatment, and man-
agement of complications of infective endocarditis.
A multidisciplinary committee of experts drafted
this document to assist physicians in the evolving
care of patients with infective endocarditis in the
new millennium.
Diagnosis
The variability in clinical presentation of IE requires
a diagnostic strategy that is both sensitive for disease
detection and specifi c for its exclusion across all
forms of the disease. In 1994, Durack and colleagues
from Duke University Medical Center proposed a
diagnostic schema termed the Duke criteria, which
The AHA Guidelines and Scientific Statements Handbook
Edited by Valentin Fuster © 2009 American Heart Association
ISBN: 978-1-405-18463-2