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Active clinical trials for "Endocarditis, Bacterial"

Results 71-80 of 89

Infective Endocarditis in the Elderly

Infective Endocarditis

ELDERL-IE is a multicenter national prospective observational study. The main objective is to describe geriatric characteristics (comorbidities, cognitive status, autonomy, nutritional status, balance and walking) in patients aged 75 years or older with infective endocarditis (IE). The secondary objectives are to assess the impact of geriatric features on the medico - surgical care and on morbidity and mortality at 3 months after the end of the hospitalization, and to describe the initial clinical presentation and diagnostic modalities in the IE elderly.

Completed4 enrollment criteria

Evolution of the Profile of Infectious Endocarditis in France in 2008 (EI2008)

Infective Endocarditis

Infective endocarditis (IE) is a rare (30 cases / million / year in France) and serious (20 % of deaths during hospitalization) disease . Its epidemiological profile was considerably modified these last years.New predisposing factors appeared, due to increasing number of patients wearing valvular prosthetics. The purpose of this study is to realize in 2008 a new observational study on populational basis to describe and analyze the evolution of the epidemiology of IE in France, compared to previous studies conducted in 1991 and 1999.

Completed5 enrollment criteria

Evaluation of Systemic Microvascular Endothelial Dysfunction in Patients Presenting With Infective...

Infective Endocarditis

Infective endocarditis (IE) is a severe clinical condition with a high in-hospital and 5-year mortality. It has a growing incidence, both related to healthcare and possibly to changes in prophylaxis recommendations regarding oral procedures. Though not a new disease, several aspects in its clinical and laboratory diagnosis remain to be better studied and innovated. The evaluation of systemic microvascular disease has proven crucial in the investigation and comprehension of pathophysiology of cardiovascular diseases, as well as a tool for early diagnosis and prediction of complications. Few studies deal with microcirculation in patients with IE, and so far none utilizing speckle contrast imaging and functional capillary density. The present study will contribute to the investigation of microcirculatory changes in IE and possibly to earlier diagnosis of the condition and/or of its severity and complications. The aim of the study is to evaluate the changes in microvascular bed of patients with both acute and subacute endocarditis by speckle contrast imaging and skin video-capillaroscopy.

Completed11 enrollment criteria

Clinical Metagenomics of Infective Endocarditis

Infective Endocarditis

Infective endocarditis (IE) is an infection of cardiac valves. IE mainly involves bacteria, more rarely fungi. IE is an uncommon diseases with an estimated incidence of 1-12 cases per 100,000 inhabitants per year. The diagnostic of IE relies on the culture of biological samples (blood cultures and per-operative samples) in the bacteriology laboratory in order to identify the pathogen and its susceptibility to antimicrobials. Nonetheless in about 10% of the cases, the blood cultures remain negative, due to antibiotics taken before harvesting, to non-culturable bacteria or to aseptic phenomena. Clinical metagenomics is defined as the application of high-throughput sequencing (NGS) followed by a specific bioinformatics analysis to obtain clinical information, i.e. pathogen identification and the prediction of their susceptibility to antimicrobials. The metagenome of a sample (i.e. all the genomes of the organisms present) virtually contains all the information necessary for bacteriological diagnosis: what is the pathogenic bacteria , and to which antibiotics it is susceptible. Hence, using clinical metagenomics in the context of IE appears seducing in order to overcome the limitations of conventional methods based on culture. Here, we propose to assess the performance of clinical metagenomics in the diagnostic of IE.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

Inflammatory Mediator Profiles During Heart Valve Replacement Surgery

Infective EndocarditisValvular Heart Disease

The study aims at the comparative examination of pre-, intra- and post-operative release profiles of inflammatory and vasoactive mediators in patients undergoing heart valve surgery under cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) due to either infectious endocarditis or degenerative valvular heart disease. Specific attention will focus on the distinction between mediator release associated with infection and that resulting from CPB. Concomitantly identification and characterization of infectious pathogens in the circulation and in valvular samples will be carried out, together with the search for resistance-coding transcripts.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

How to Improve Diagnosis in Infective Endocarditis

EndocarditisBacterial

The purpose is to exam prospective if simple clinical information in combination with a normal s-procalcitonin are sufficient for exclusion of infective endocarditis (IE).

Completed3 enrollment criteria

PET CT in Suspected CIED Infection, a Pilot Study - PET Guidance I

ComplicationsInfective Endocarditis2 more

The aim of this single-center randomized controlled trial is to assess clinical usefulness of positron emission tomography combined with computed tomography (PET CT) in the diagnostic process of suspected cardiovascular implantable electronic device (CIED) infection (lead dependent infective endocarditis, generator pocket infection, fever of unknown origin).

Unknown status10 enrollment criteria

Contemporary Transvenous Lead Extraction Outcomes

Pacemaker Lead DysfunctionPacemaker Electrode Infection2 more

Presentation of procedural safety and outcomes data from a high volume TLE centre

Unknown status2 enrollment criteria

NExt-Generation Sequencing and Cell Culture-based Characterization of S. Aureus in Infective Endocarditis...

Infective EndocarditisInfection Staphylococcal

Infective endocarditis is a deadly disease with a mortality rate between 20 and 40%. Antibiotic therapy is of utmost importance. It is primarily guided by microbial results from positive blood culture. However, culture-based microbiological diagnostic can identify the species, but not the strain or the genotypic characteristics of a pathogen. Identifying the strain can be of utmost clinical significance. S. aureus is the most common causative organism of IE worldwide (16%-32%). This pathogen causes massive valve destruction and abscesses, which is strongly dependent on the expression of virulence factors that vary between different S. aureus strains. Functional characterization of S. aureus and determination of virulence factors can currently be achieved through cell culture-based assays (CCBA). However, these tests are very time consuming and cannot be performed as routine clinical diagnostics. Next Generation Sequencing (NSG) has the potential to identify the genotypic characteristics of the pathogen, which is important to determine its virulent potential. The aim of this study is to evaluate the possible utilization of NGS in the prediction of virulence factors of S. aureus and to compare it to the virulence factors determined using CCBA. Hopefully, by comparing the NGS and CCBA, the investigators will get a faster way of determining the possible virulence factors. The NGS method can be further utilized to describe the prevalence of different strains of bacteria in infected valve tissue and blood culture samples. The collected data will serve as a basis for further evaluation of the potentials of NGS-based Diagnosis of IE, as well as a comparison between NGS-guided antibiotic treatment and the standard of care antibiotic treatment.

Unknown status5 enrollment criteria

Beta-lactam Pharmacokinetics in Patients With Infective Endocarditis

Infective Endocarditis

The recommended length of antibiotic treatment to patients with infective endocarditis is 4-6 weeks. All patients receive the same dosis except for those with renal impairment who receive a smaller dose. For Beta-lactam antibiotics, a plasma concentration above the minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) for at least 50% of the time in a dosing interval maximize bactericidal activity. To estimate the time for which the antibiotic concentration is above the MIC (T>MIC) and to see if there might be a relationship between the concentration of antibiotics and possible side-effects, toxicity and treatment failure, all patients admitted with infective endocarditis will be followed and have two blood tests withdrawn once a week during antibiotic treatment, an expected average of 5 weeks.

Unknown status3 enrollment criteria
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