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European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery, Vol 3, 146-150, Copyright © 1989 by European Association for Cardio-thoracic Surgery


ARTICLES

Cardiac surgery in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) carriers

RW Frater, D Sisto and D Condit
Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY.

Intravenous drug addicts have always been at risk for acquiring infective endocarditis. In the United States in recent years, as many as 50% of addicts have become infected also with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Since testing became available in late 1984, we have knowingly performed open cardiac surgery for endocarditis 11 times in HIV-positive patients. In 7, signs of infection were still presented at the time of surgery. Four died within 2 months of continued or recurrent sepsis. The others are alive, although 1 has returned to IV drug abuse. Open heart surgery was performed 4 times in patients whose endocarditis had been cured by antibiotics but who were left with destroyed valves and severe congestive cardiac failure. All these patients left hospital alive and well. One has since died of AIDS. Ten addicts with endocarditis coming to surgery in the pre-AIDS era had similar valvular pathology but only 2 with uncontrolled infection. All were cured by the combination of antibiotics and surgery. Conclusions: in HIV-positive patients with endocarditis, continued sepsis despite appropriate antibiotic therapy signals a potentially very serious prognosis which may be due to an already seriously impaired immune state. By contrast, in the absence of uncontrolled infection, HIV-positive patients appear to have a normal response to open cardiac surgery. Data on the risk to the patient of progressing to AIDS and the risk to the surgical team of acquiring HIV infection are unknown. Testing is vital for answering these questions.


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