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Description
A man aged 27 years from Bangladesh was referred to our centre for evaluation of fever of unknown origin of 3 months duration. There was a history of progressively increasing dyspnoea of NYHA functional class II for 25 days. He had received antibiotic therapy for a week prior to his presentation to us. Physical examination revealed muffled first heart sound with loud pulmonary component of second heart sound. A grade IV/VI (Levine grade) pan systolic murmur was heard over the apex, radiating to the left axillae. There were no clinical stigmata of infective endocarditis. Blood cultures were sterile. ECG showed sinus rhythm with left atrial enlargement and chest X-ray was suggestive of moderate cardiomegaly (cardiothoracic ratio 65%). Transthoracic echocardiogram (TTE) (figures 1 and 2 and video 1) revealed features of severe mitral regurgitation, with a ruptured abscess cavity (yellow arrow) involving the posterior mitral leaflet and annulus, communicating with the left atrium. The left ventricle and left atrium were dilated. Transoesophageal echocardiogram confirmed the findings of TTE (video 2).
Periannular extension of the endocarditis occurs in 10–40% of cases and is more commonly encountered after prosthetic valve surgery.1 Paravalvular abscess formation is commoner in the aortic valve when compared with mitral valve, and is associated with conduction abnormalities. The presence of valve ring abscesses in patients with infective endocarditis increases morbidity and mortality.2 Visualisation of the abscess cavity is often inadequate with transthoracic echocardiogram (TTE) with a sensitivity of around 30%, whereas transoesophageal echocardiography (TEE) has a sensitivity of around 90%.3 Our case depicts an instance where a meticulously performed TTE clinched the complete diagnosis, and TEE contributed no additional information. Our patient underwent successful mitral valve replacement.
Learning points
Mitral annular abscess with rupture into the left atrium causing severe mitral regurgitation is a rare complication of infective endocarditis.
Transoesophageal echocardiography is the gold standard for diagnosis.
Meticulous transthoracic echocardiography can clinch the complete diagnosis in selected cases.
Footnotes
Contributors GCG is the primary author and performed writing, editing and literature search. AP helped in editing and case discussion. AGA helped in editing. PVG is the senior author involved in editing and supervising manuscript.
Competing interests None declared.
Patient consent Obtained.
Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.