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Diagnosis of IE was not made during life in 14 (35%) cases during P1 and 12 (42.8%) cases in P2. Overall, diagnosis was missed until autopsy in 38.2% of cases. IE was hospital acquired in 28 instances. While a clinical diagnosis was made in all but 4 cases of early-onset PVE (23.5%), the diagnosis was not made during life in 22 of 51 patients with native-valve IE (43.1%). Of these 22 patients, IE was hospital acquired in 11 (50%). The absence of fever, cardiac murmurs, and many of the typical stigmata of endocarditis may have led to the diagnosis being overlooked clinically. Brain bleeding, cardiac failure and less frequently acute myocardial infarct were the most common causes of death. IE continues to be missed frequently until autopsy. Postmortem examination is an important tool for evaluating the quality of care, and for guiding teaching and research related to cardiovascular infections. |
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abscess,intracerebral abscess,intracerebral,multiple asymptomatic bacteremia blood cultures cerebral embolism cerebral infarction cerebral infarction,hemorrhagic cerebrovascular accident cerebrovascular accident,silent congestive heart failure echocardiogram embolism embolism,septic endocarditis endocarditis,acute bacterial endocarditis,infectious fever heart murmur iatrogenic neurologic disorders infection in-hospital intravenous intravenous line meningitis meningitis,iatrogenic microabscesses,cerebral misdiagnosis mortality negative nephritis neuropathology nosocomial infection organ transplantation pathology pericarditis review article staphylococcus aureus
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