Value of transthoracic echocardiography in predicting embolic events in active infective endocarditis. Duke Endocarditis Service.

The purpose of this study was twofold: (1) to determine interobserver variability of echocardiographic characteristics of vegetations in patients with infective endocarditis, and (2) to assess the value of these vegetation characteristics in predicting embolic events. Although echocardiography contributes to the diagnosis of patients with infective endocarditis, its prognostic role in predicting embolic events is controversial. The echocardiograms of 41 patients with infective endocarditis were independently reviewed by 4 echocardiographers blinded to the clinical data. If a vegetation was present, the following characteristics were analyzed: involved site, size, mobility, shape, and pedunculated or sessile attachment. Each echocardiographer also made a "gestalt" estimate of embolic risk based on these vegetation characteristics. Interobserver agreement on vegetation characteristics and their relation to embolic events was then determined using kappa statistics and logistic regression analysis. Interobserver agreement was 98% with regard to echocardiographic vegetation presence and 97% with regard to the involved site. Of the 30 patients in whom vegetations were observed, complete observer agreement was achieved with regard to size in 22 (73%), mobility in 17 (57%), shape in 11 (37%), and attachment in 12 (40%). Vegetations with a maximal diameter of > 10 mm were associated with a 50% incidence of embolic events, compared with a 42% incidence of emboli in patients with vegetations measuring < or = 10 mm. Interobserver variability was great with respect to vegetation shape, mobility, and attachment characteristics. Echocardiographic vegetation characteristics were not helpful in defining the risk of embolic complications in patients with endocarditis.

[1]  C. Otto,et al.  Infective endocarditis, 1983-1988: echocardiographic findings and factors influencing morbidity and mortality. , 1990, Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

[2]  R. Popp,et al.  The Use of Echocardiography in Diagnosing Culture‐negative Endocarditis , 1981, Circulation.

[3]  R. Devereux,et al.  Relation between the presence of echocardiographic vegetations and the complication rate in infective endocarditis. , 1986, American heart journal.

[4]  R. Siegel,et al.  Natural history of tricuspid valve endocarditis: a two dimensional echocardiographic study. , 1982, The American journal of cardiology.

[5]  N. Schiller,et al.  Diagnostic value of transesophageal compared with transthoracic echocardiography in infective endocarditis. , 1991, Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

[6]  J D Thomas,et al.  Echocardiographic assessment of patients with infectious endocarditis: prediction of risk for complications. , 1991, Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

[7]  A. Tajik,et al.  Spectrum of echocardiographic findings in bacterial endocarditis. , 1976, Circulation.

[8]  E. Geiser,et al.  Infective endocarditis and echocardiography. , 1984, American heart journal.

[9]  R. Frater,et al.  Influence of vegetation size on clinical outcome of right-sided infective endocarditis. , 1986, The American journal of medicine.

[10]  F. Crawford,et al.  Two‐dimensional Echocardiographic Assessment of Vegetative Endocarditis , 1977, Circulation.

[11]  A. Weyman,et al.  Echocardiography in bacterial endocarditis. , 1976, The New England journal of medicine.

[12]  J. Kisslo,et al.  Echocardiographic Documentation of Vegetative Lesions in Infective Endocarditis: Clinical Implications , 1980, Circulation.

[13]  D. Durack,et al.  New criteria for diagnosis of infective endocarditis: utilization of specific echocardiographic findings. Duke Endocarditis Service. , 1994, The American journal of medicine.

[14]  Randolph P. Martin,et al.  Clinical utility of two dimensional echocardiography in infective endocarditis. , 1980, The American journal of cardiology.

[15]  G. Mintz,et al.  Clinical value and limitations of echocardiography. Its use in the study of patients with infectious endocarditis. , 1980 .

[16]  J. Dillon Echocardiography in valvular vegetations. , 1977, The American journal of medicine.

[17]  A. Buda,et al.  Prognostic significance of vegetations detected by two-dimensional echocardiography in infective endocarditis. , 1986, American heart journal.

[18]  K. Bailey,et al.  Emboli in infective endocarditis: the prognostic value of echocardiography. , 1991, Annals of internal medicine.

[19]  A Mügge,et al.  Echocardiography in infective endocarditis: reassessment of prognostic implications of vegetation size determined by the transthoracic and the transesophageal approach. , 1989, Journal of the American College of Cardiology.