Epidemiology of infective endocarditis in Tunisia: a 10-year multicenter retrospective study

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijid.2006.10.006Get rights and content
Under an Elsevier user license
open archive

Summary

Background

Since the first description of infective endocarditis, the profile of the disease has evolved continuously with stable incidence. However, epidemiological features are different in developing countries compared with western countries.

Objective

To describe epidemiological, microbiological and outcome characteristics of infective endocarditis in Tunisia.

Patients and methods

This was a descriptive multicenter retrospective study of inpatients treated for infective endocarditis from 1991 to 2000. Charts of patients with possible or definite infective endocarditis according to the Duke criteria were included in the study.

Results

Four hundred and forty episodes of infective endocarditis among 435 patients (242 males, 193 females; mean (SD) age = 32.4 (16.8) years, range 1–78 years) were reviewed. The most common predisposing heart disease was rheumatic valvular disease (45.2%). Infective endocarditis occurred on prosthetic valves in 17.3% of cases. Causative microorganisms were identified in 50.2% of cases: streptococci (17.3%), enterococci (3.9%), staphylococci (17.9%), and other pathogens (11.1%). Blood cultures were negative in 53.6% and no microorganism was identified in 49.8%. Early valve surgery was performed in 51.2% of patients. The in-hospital mortality was 20.6%.

Conclusion

Infective endocarditis is still frequently associated with rheumatic disease among young adults in Tunisia, with a high frequency of negative blood cultures and high in-hospital mortality, given that the population affected is relatively young.

Keywords

Infective endocarditis
Epidemiology
Native valve
Rheumatic fever
Staphylococcus
Streptococcus
Negative blood cultures
Mortality

Cited by (0)