Miliary tuberculosis following homograft valve replacement

TitleMiliary tuberculosis following homograft valve replacement
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication1976
AuthorsAnyanwu CH, Nassau E, Yacoub M
JournalThorax
Volume31
Issue1
Pagination101 - 6
Date PublishedFeb
ISSN0040-6376 (Print) 0040-6376 (Linking)
Accession Number816028
KeywordsAdult, Aged, Aortic Valve / surgery, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Mitral Valve / surgery, Mycobacterium tuberculosis / isolation & purification, Postoperative Complications, Time Factors, Tuberculosis, Miliary / diagnosis / *etiology / mortality
Abstract

Postoperative septicaemia with infective endocarditis is a recognized complication of open-heart surgery, in particular homograft or prosthetic replacement of cardiac valves. Several infective organisms, both bacterial and fungal, have been incriminated but infection due to tubercle bacilli has not, to our knowledge, been reported. The clinicopathological features of this condition are discussed. During a five-year period, over 800 homograft replacements in the aortic and/or mitral positions have been performed at Harefield Hospital. Seven cases of miliary tuberculosis following homograft valve replacement are descrbied here. In three, there was a past history suggestive of tuberculosis infections but necropsy failed to reveal any caseous or other tuberculous lesion apart from recent miliary tuberculosis. Vegetations on the homograft valves contained microcolonies of acid-fast bacilli in most cases. Tubercle bacilli of the human type were recovered by culture or guinea-pig inoculation in six of the seven cases, and in three the diagnosis was established during life; two of these survived on antituberculosis chemotherapy. The onset of symptoms varied from a few weeks to 12 months after operation. The main presenting symptom was intermittent pyrexia. In two patients the diagnosis was made on radiological and clinical grounds and in both, tubercle bacilli were grown from drill biopsy specimens of lung tissue. The source of infection was presumed to be the homograft valves contaminated in the postmorten room. The antibiotic mixture used in the sterilization of the homografts was not effective against tubercle bacilli.

Notify Library Reference ID86