Abstract
To remind clinicians and clinical microbiologists of the clinical features and therapeutic aspects of pneumococcal endocarditis, patients with pneumococcal endocarditis from 1986 to 1997 were identified via an enquiry to clinical microbiologists across Denmark. For all patients records were reviewed to confirm the diagnosis of pneumococcal endocarditis, and the clinical course, therapy and outcome were analysed. 16 patients with definitive pneumococcal endocarditis were found. All pneumococcal isolates were sensitive to penicillin. 15 patients had no previously known cardiac valvular disease, 10 patients had X-ray-proven pneumonia and 5 had meningitis. The aortic valve was affected in 13 patients, of whom 12 developed aortic insufficiency and 11 cardiac failure. Of 7 patients who underwent surgery, 6 needed immediate cardiac valve replacement. The 30-day case fatality rate was 19% (95% confidence limits 4-46%). Pneumococcal endocarditis must be considered when treating patients with pneumococcaemia. The most important clue to the diagnosis is a significant murmur and development of heart failure. Evaluation by transoesophageal echocardiography is helpful in determining the diagnosis and assessing the need for surgical intervention. With appropriate antibiotic therapy, close observation and cardiac valve replacement if necessary, the prognosis is better than recorded in earlier studies.