1 Department of Cardiac Surgery, Aberdeen Royal Infirmary, Foresterhill,
Aberdeen AB25 2ZN, Scotland, UK
2 Department of Cardiology, Aberdeen Royal Infirmary, Foresterhill, Aberdeen
AB25 2ZN, Scotland, UK
3 Department of Pathology, Aberdeen Royal Infirmary, Foresterhill, Aberdeen AB25
2ZN, Scotland, UK
4 Department of Medical Microbiology, Aberdeen Royal Infirmary,
Foresterhill,Aberdeen AB25 2ZN, Scotland, UK
Correspondence to: Dr Douglas West E-mail: dgwest{at}rcsed.ac.uk
The causal organism in Whipple's disease, a rare disorder with characteristic duodenal and jejunal changes, was first cultured in 2000.1 Although cardiac involvement is common in Whipple's, it is seldom an isolated finding.
CASE HISTORY
A man of 58, with the habit of drinking 80100 units of alcohol a week, was referred to our hospital with heart failure. Nine months earlier his usual good health had been interrupted by an episode of acute shortness of breath without chest pain. Transthoracic echocardiography had revealed global impairment of myocardial function without a rise in troponin. He was diagnosed as having alcoholic cardiomyopathy with or without coronary artery disease and responded well to an angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor and a diuretic. Shortly before readmission his shortness of breath returned. He was again in cardiac failure, with peripheral oedema, hepatic congestion, and a raised jugulovenous pressure. There was no fever. Echocardiography showed a dilated left ventricle with global hypokinesis. A coronary angiogram was normal. Over the next eight weeks serial echocardiograms revealed worsening regurgitation at the mitral and aortic valves, with new mobile masses forming on both. Initially, antibiotics were withheld and he remained apyrexial. Seven sets of paired aerobic and anaerobic blood cultures yielded no bacterial growth; C-reactive protein ranged from 36 to 69 mg/L. Broad-spectrum antibiotics were introduced, but his heart failure worsened and surgical intervention was judged necessary. At operation multiple firm, pearly-yellow vegetations were apparent on the aortic and mitral valves and an abscess was found within the posterior annulus of the mitral valve. This was deroofed and swabbed copiously with iodine. St Jude Biocor bioprosthetic valves were inserted in the aortic and mitral positions. Postoperatively he was coagulopathic with high output cardiac failure. Despite blood product replacement, inotrope therapy and intraaortic balloon pump support he developed peripheral circulatory failure and died 48 hours after surgery.
Pathology
Post mortem samples were taken from heart, coronary artery, lung, liver,
kidney and duodenum. Valve tissue from surgical specimens was fixed in 4%
buffered formaldehyde and embedded in paraffin. 4 µm sections were stained
with haematoxylin and eosin, methenamine silver and elastica van Gieson.
Periodic acid Schiff reaction was performed with (D-PAS) and without (PAS)
prior diastase treatment. Gram and ZiehlNeelsen stains were performed.
For electron microscopy, small areas of chordae tendineae with representative
yellow adhesions were fixed in 2.5% glutaradehyde, postfixed in 1.0% osmium
tetroxide and embedded in TAAB epoxy resin. Ultrathin sections were stained
with uranyl acetate and lead citrate, and viewed in a Phillips EM10
transmission electron microscope.
Macroscopically, small, warty, yellow elevated adhesions were present, particularly on the chordae tendineae (Figure 1a). Histological examination showed subendocardial neovascularization (Figure 1b) resembling previous descriptions of Whipple's endocarditis.2 D-PAS positive foamy macrophages, which stained with silver, were found in areas corresponding to the yellow lesions (Figure 1c,d,e). On electron microscopy, large lysosomal inclusions and multivesicular bodies were seen within macrophages, containing microbial structures in various stages of lysis (Figure 1f). Within these inclusions electron dense, rod shaped multilamellar structures were clearly visible (Figure 1g).
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COMMENT
Whilst 2055% of patients with a diagnosis of Whipple's disease have clinically evident cardiac manifestations,4 in very few reported cases has the initial presentation been valvular heart disease.5,6 Paravalvular abscess formation, seen in the present case, does not seem to have been reported in Whipple's endocarditis. Once diagnosed, Whipple's disease can be successfully treated with 12 years of agents such as cotrimoxazole.
In the past, Whipple's endocarditis was diagnosed solely on light and electron microscopy but specific PCR testing for T. whippelii DNA has been commercially available for several years, and tests on valve tissue in culture-negative endocarditis have identified occasional cases of T. whippelii infection.7 However, preoperative testing of blood or intestinal samples could give misleading results, since T. whippelii DNA has been found in symptomless individuals and in human sewage; in other words, some people may be colonized without harm. As yet, no sensitive and specific serological test exists. Therefore the diagnosis must be sought as soon as valve tissue is available from operation. Had the present patient survived without diagnosis, his endocarditis might well have returned postoperatively.
Acknowledgments
Renate Kain is supported by the National Kidney Research Fund grant SF3/2000. We thank Dr Colin Fink, Micropathology Ltd, Coventry, for performing the PCR assay.
REFERENCES
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