IE Basics & Etiology - Heart's Unwanted Guests
- Infection of endocardium, valves, or devices.
- Etiology:
- Mainly bacterial; fungi rare.
⭐ Staphylococcus aureus is the most common causative organism of infective endocarditis in children, particularly with intravascular catheters or post-cardiac surgery.
- S. viridans (post-dental).
- HACEK group (📌 Haemophilus, Aggregatibacter, Cardiobacterium, Eikenella, Kingella).
- CoNS (prosthetic valves/devices).
- Risk Factors (Pediatrics):
- CHD (most common).
- RHD.
- Central venous catheters.
- Previous cardiac surgery.
- Immunocompromised state_
IE Pathophysiology - Attack on the Valves
⭐ The formation of vegetations in infective endocarditis typically begins with endothelial damage, leading to a non-bacterial thrombotic endocarditis (NBTE) nidus, which is then colonized by bacteria during transient bacteremia.
IE Clinical Features - Signs of Siege
- Systemic: Persistent fever (often > 38°C), chills, malaise, weight loss, arthralgia.
- Cardiac:
- New or changing heart murmur (most specific sign).
- Signs of heart failure (tachycardia, tachypnea, hepatomegaly).
- Peripheral Stigmata (📌 FROM JANE):
- Fever
- Roth spots (retinal hemorrhages)
- Osler nodes (painful, tender nodules on digits)
- Murmur (new/changed)
- Janeway lesions (painless, erythematous macules on palms/soles)
- Anemia
- Nail-bed (splinter) hemorrhages
- Emboli (septic; to brain, spleen, kidney, etc.)
- Other: Splenomegaly, clubbing (late finding).

⭐ A new or changing heart murmur is a hallmark clinical finding in pediatric infective endocarditis and should prompt further investigation.
IE Diagnosis - The Evidence Trail
- Blood Cultures: 3 sets, different sites, 1hr apart, pre-antibiotics.
- Echo: TTE → TEE. Shows vegetations, abscess, new regurgitation.
- Modified Duke Criteria: IE = 2M / 1M+3m / 5m.
- Other: CBC (anemia), ↑ESR/CRP.
| Major Criteria | Minor Criteria |
|---|---|
| 1. +Blood cultures (typical orgs) | 1. Predisposition (cardiac/IVDU) |
| 2. Echo evidence (vegetation etc) | 2. Fever ≥38°C |
| 3. Vascular (emboli, Janeway) | |
| 4. Immunologic (Osler, Roth, GN) | |
| 5. +Micro evidence (not major) |
⭐ The Modified Duke Criteria are essential for diagnosing infective endocarditis, with positive blood cultures for typical organisms and echocardiographic evidence of endocardial involvement being the two major criteria.
IE Management & Prophylaxis - Shielding the Heart
-
Management:
- Goals: Eradicate infection, manage complications.
- Antibiotics:
- Empirical: Vancomycin + Gentamicin.
- Culture-directed: 4-6 weeks (Native Valve Endocarditis - NVE), ≥6 weeks (Prosthetic Valve Endocarditis - PVE).
- Surgery Indications: Heart Failure (HF), fungal IE, persistent sepsis, large vegetations (>10mm) + emboli, perivalvular abscess.
-
Prophylaxis:
- High-Risk Patients Only: Prosthetic valves, prior IE, specific Congenital Heart Diseases (CHDs) (unrepaired cyanotic; repaired <6 months with prosthetic material or device; repaired with residual defect), cardiac transplant recipients with valvulopathy.
- High-Risk Procedures:
- Dental: Gingival/periapical manipulation, oral mucosa perforation.
- Respiratory Tract: Incision/biopsy of mucosa (e.g., tonsillectomy, adenoidectomy).
- Regimen: Amoxicillin 50 mg/kg (max 2g) orally 30-60 minutes before procedure.
- Penicillin allergy: Clindamycin 20 mg/kg (max 600mg) or Azithromycin/Clarithromycin 15 mg/kg (max 500mg).
⭐ Antibiotic prophylaxis for infective endocarditis is recommended only for the highest-risk pediatric patients (e.g., those with prosthetic cardiac valves or previous IE) undergoing specific dental procedures involving gingival manipulation or respiratory tract incisions.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Most common organisms: Staphylococcus aureus; Viridans streptococci with underlying CHD.
- Congenital Heart Disease (CHD) is the major predisposing factor in pediatrics.
- Diagnosis uses Modified Duke Criteria; echocardiography confirms vegetations.
- Obtain multiple blood cultures (ideally 3 sets) before starting antibiotics.
- Antibiotic prophylaxis is vital for high-risk CHD patients during certain procedures.
- Empirical treatment: Typically Vancomycin plus Gentamicin.
- Key complications include septic emboli and congestive heart failure.
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