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Endocarditis Treatment in Germany - Best Hospitals, Doctors, Prices - Booking Health

Treatment of Endocarditis in Germany

Endocarditis Treatment in Germany | Information about hospitals and doctors | Rankings | Clinics | Prices | Send request to the hospital

Best hospitals and doctors for endocarditis treatment in Germany

Leading hospitals

Cost for treatment

Endocarditis diagnosis
2460
Conservative treatment of endocarditis
6240.13
Pericardial drainage to treat endocarditis
15108.3
Cardiac rehabilitation
0.00
Vivantes Auguste-Viktoria Hospital Berlin
Germany, Berlin
Vivantes Auguste-Viktoria Hospital Berlin
Overall rating9.7 / 10
The Vivantes Auguste-Victoria Hospital, has special expertise and received international recognition in the field of Urology, especially in the treatment of prostate cancer and also Oncology, Neurology, Cardiology and other directions. The possibilities of urological treatment include robot-assisted surgeries using the Da Vinci
Vivantes Am Urban Hospital Berlin
Germany, Berlin
Vivantes Am Urban Hospital Berlin
Overall rating9.7 / 10
The Vivantes Am Urban Hospital is an academic clinic at the Charité University Hospital. Many departments of the hospital are recognized for their outstanding medical and patient care services. The hospital also includes the Breast Center, the Tumor Center with the specialization "Gastrointestinal oncology" and
Vivantes Kaulsdorf Hospital Berlin
Germany, Berlin
Vivantes Kaulsdorf Hospital Berlin
Overall rating9.7 / 10
The main medical directions of the hospital include general and abdominal surgery, orthopedics and traumatology, in particular the Endoprosthesis Center (EndoProthetikZentrum EPZ). The doctors of the hospital are experts in the field of internal medicine, cardiology, gastroenterology and geriatrics. The hospital also has a Diabe
Vivantes Humboldt Hospital Berlin
Germany, Berlin
Vivantes Humboldt Hospital Berlin
Overall rating9.7 / 10
An academic clinic of the university medical complex Charité, the Vivantes Humboldt Hospital is one of the largest specialized medical institutions in Berlin. The hospital is famous for its impeccable reputation in the field of traumatology, orthopedics, urology and gynecology, as well as treatment of oncological diseases
Helios Hospital Siegburg
Germany, Siegburg
Helios Hospital Siegburg
Overall rating9.4 / 10
The Helios Hospital Siegburg enjoys an excellent reputation in North Rhine-Westphalia and throughout Germany. The healthcare facility provides comprehensive medical care that meets current clinical protocols and international standards. The hospital has more than 350 beds. The hospital employs a highly motivated team of doctors
Schoen Clinic Duesseldorf
Germany, Duesseldorf
Schoen Clinic Duesseldorf
Overall rating9.7 / 10
According to the reputable Focus magazine, the Schoen Clinic Duesseldorf is one of the top medical facilities in North Rhine-Westphalia and is also one of the best Spinal Surgery Centers in Germany. The Schoen Clinic Duesseldorf is recognized as a leading medical facility that provides high-quality medical care with an emphasis
University Hospital Mainz
Germany, Mainz
University Hospital Mainz
Overall rating9.7 / 10
The University Hospital Mainz is one of the best maximum care medical facilities in Germany and an internationally recognized scientific center. There are more than 60 departments and institutes, which represent all fields of modern medicine. The hospital serves more than 68,000 inpatients and more than 273,000 outpatients annua
German Heart Center Munich
Germany, Munich
German Heart Center Munich
Overall rating9 / 10
The German Heart Center Munich is a specialized medical facility for treating cardiovascular diseases in patients of all ages that combines long traditions, unique experience, and the highest level of competence among doctors. The center began its work in 1972 and, during that time, became the etalon Heart Center at the internat
University Hospital Freiburg
Germany, Freibung
University Hospital Freiburg
Overall rating9.7 / 10
The University Hospital Freiburg is famous for its rich history and is one of the oldest and most prestigious medical facilities in Germany (one of the three best medical institutions in the country). The hospital was based on the Faculty of Medicine of the Albert Ludwig University of Freiburg, which celebrated its 550th anniver
Preventicum Diagnostic Сlinic Essen
Germany, Essen
Preventicum Diagnostic Сlinic Essen
Overall rating10 / 10
The Preventicum Diagnostic Clinic Essen is an advanced medical center oriented on providing high-quality diagnostic and therapeutic services. The primary focus of the clinic is comprehensive diagnostics, including preventive examinations (check-ups). The clinic presents such medical fields as internal medicine, cardiology, gastr
Vivantes Neukölln Hospital Berlin
Germany, Berlin
Vivantes Neukölln Hospital Berlin
Overall rating10 / 10
The Vivantes Neukölln Hospital is the maximum care hospital and one of the largest healthcare facilities in Berlin.  There are more than 20 specialized departments and centers, including pediatric departments. In total, the hospital has 1,200 beds. The hospital uses innovative technologies and the latest treatments, as
Asklepios Hospital Barmbek Hamburg
Germany, Hamburg
Asklepios Hospital Barmbek Hamburg
Overall rating9.5 / 10
The Asklepios Hospital Barmbek Hamburg is an academic hospital of the University of Hamburg. The hospital was opened in 2005, and today it is one of the best and most modern medical centers in Europe. The priority areas of specialization of the medical facility are emergency medical care and comprehensive treatment of cancer, ur
Park-Clinic Weissensee Berlin
Germany, Berlin
Park-Clinic Weissensee Berlin
Overall rating9 / 10
The Park-Clinic Weissensee Berlin is a progressive medical facility with the highest standards of medical care. The medical facility is an academic hospital of the Charite University Hospital Berlin, thanks to which the specialists have access to all medical innovations. The clinic was opened on April 1, 1997, on the former Weis
Max Grundig Clinic Buehl
Germany, Buehl
Max Grundig Clinic Buehl
Overall rating9.5 / 10
For over 30 years, the Max Grundig Clinic Buehl has enjoyed the status of one of the best medical centers not only in Germany but throughout Europe. The clinic was founded by Max Grundig, a legendary man whose work has always been aimed at the well-being of society. The medical complex still honors long traditions and adheres to
| from Booking Health GmbH

Endocarditis implies the inflammation process of the endocardium. Endocarditis cannot be defined as an independent health condition, as this pathology is quite often a manifestation of another heart disease or its consequence. Such an inflammatory process in the heart can affect aortic and mitral valves, and the vessels that adjoin the heart.

Content

  1. What is endocarditis?
  2. Types of endocarditis
  3. Endocarditis risk groups
  4. Symptoms of endocarditis
  5. Treatment principles in hospitals in Germany
  6. How effective is antibacterial therapy?
  7. Surgical treatment of endocarditis in hospitals in Germany
  8. Who needs medical prophylaxis against endocarditis?
  9. Hospitals in Germany for endocarditis treatment
  10. The cost of treatment in Germany

What is endocarditis?

 

Endocarditis is one of the most insidious heart diseases, accompanied by the formation of vegetations on the mitral and aortic valves or subclavian structures, their destruction, dysfunction, and formation of valve failure. Under the influence of various infections (there are about 130 pathogens of this disease), the inner lining of the heart becomes inflamed. The danger is that the symptoms of infectious endocarditis do not appear immediately, so patients with the pathology do not always seek medical help in time. Also, the disease is not easy to diagnose, so treatment may be started later than it should be. That is why cardiologists recommend regular examinations at medical centers equipped with modern devices with extensive diagnostic capabilities.

There are acute and subacute forms of infectious endocarditis. Quite common in the past, the prolonged course of endocarditis is now a rarity. The aortic and mitral valve endocarditis is most often detected, while the tricuspid valve and pulmonary valve are less often involved.

The annual incidence of infectious endocarditis is 38 cases per 100 thousand people, and more often it affects young people. In recent years, there has been a widespread increase in the incidence of infectious endocarditis, which is associated with the widespread use of invasive instrumentation, more frequent surgical interventions on the heart, increasing drug addiction, and the number of patients with immunodeficiency conditions. The lethality in infectious endocarditis still remains at the level of 24-30%, reaching 45% in elderly and senile patients. These data emphasize the difficulty of timely diagnosis and treatment of this health condition.

Types of endocarditis

 

According to the causes and clinical manifestations, the disease is classified as follows:

  • Infectious or bacterial endocarditis most often manifests itself in an acute form, involving ulcers and polyps forming on the heart valves or in the heart tissues, which leads to functional disorders.
  • The chronic or subacute form is usually caused by streptococci. The disease is manifested by ulceration and a change in the shape of heart valves, the formation of blood clots in blood vessels with subsequent occlusion. Kidney inflammation, also affecting other organs may follow.
  • The disease of non-infectious nature occurs due to a general weakening of the body, with various intoxications. It is most often manifested in the form of thrombotic deposits on the tissues of the valves.
  • Rheumatic endocarditis, as the name itself suggests, occurs due to rheumatism. Rheumatic inflammation spreads to the heart valves and causes heart defects. There are 4 forms of it, such as diffuse, acute warty, recurrent warty, and fibroblastic.
  • Loeffler endocarditis is characterized by an increase in eosinophils in the blood and a decrease in the volume of the heart chambers due to fibrotic changes in the endocardium and then in the myocardium. There are three stages: acute (cell death within 5-6 weeks), thrombotic (thrombus formation and atrophy of some tissues), and fibrosis (sclerosis and thickening of the endocardium).

Endocarditis risk groups

 

The following groups of people have a higher risk of getting the heart disease than the general population:

  • Patients with heart valve disease. There are two kinds of problems here: valve stenosis, in which there are constrictions and disturbances in blood flow, and valve regurgitation, in which the valves do not close properly and blood flow moves in the wrong direction. Heart valve disease can be congenital or acquired, i.e., arising from rheumatism, myocardial infarction, or hypertension.
  • People with prosthetic valves. The risk is relatively low. Only one patient with an artificial valve out of a hundred develops endocarditis.
  • Patients suffering from hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. In this heart disease, the heart chambers have a smaller volume due to the thickening of the muscle walls. This leads to decreased blood flow and impaired muscle relaxation.
  • Patients who have a central venous catheter.
  • People who are immunocompromised, such as those with HIV or receiving chemotherapy.

Symptoms of endocarditis

 

Fever and intoxication are the earliest and most persistent symptoms of infective endocarditis and are seen in almost all patients. The nature of the increase in body temperature can be very different. In subacute endocarditis, the disease often begins asymptomatically, with fever, malaise, headaches, general weakness, fatigue, decreased appetite, and weight loss. Subfebrile fever is accompanied by coughing and sweating. During this period, cardiac complaints are usually absent, except for persistent sinus tachycardia, which is often incorrectly associated with a fever.

The fever itself and accompanying symptoms of intoxication are often considered a manifestation of tuberculosis intoxication, chronic tonsillitis, chronic bronchitis, viral infection, etc. After a few weeks (up to 4-8 weeks), a more or less typical clinical picture is formed in patients. An irregular fever of the remittent type (less hectic or persistent) sets in. The body temperature usually rises, which is accompanied by pronounced chills. Sometimes the fever sets in alternating with short periods of lowering to normal temperature numbers. Cardiac symptoms usually appear later, with the formation of aortic or mitral valve disease or/and the development of myocarditis. Due to increasing intoxication and elevated body temperature, the following symptoms may appear and gradually progress:

  • Dyspnea at exercise or rest.
  • Pain in the heart region of moderate intensity (often prolonged); in rarer cases, the pain becomes acute and resembles an attack of angina pectoris.
  • Persistent sinus tachycardia, independent of the degree of increase in body temperature.

Later on, a developed clinical picture of left ventricular insufficiency may appear.

It should be remembered that infectious endocarditis, which is a multiorgan disease, may manifest with various symptoms due to lesions not only of the heart, but also of other organs and systems. In this regard, the following symptoms may come to the fore:

  • Swelling under the eyes.
  • Intense headaches, blood in the urine, headaches, pain in the lumbar region, urinary disorders (symptoms of glomerulonephritis or kidney infarction).
  • Intense headaches, dizziness, nausea, vomiting, general brain, and focal neurological symptoms (cerebrovascular disease or cerebral thromboembolism with development of ischemic stroke).
  • Sharp pain in the left subcostal area (spleen infarction).
  • Skin rash similar to hemorrhagic vasculitis.
  • Clinical manifestations of pulmonary infarction.
  • Sudden loss of vision.
  • Joint pain.

Treatment principles in hospitals in Germany

 

Treatment of patients with infectious endocarditis is carried out in the hospital setting with adherence to the following basic principles:

  1. Treatment should be aimed at a particular pathogen.
  2. Only antibacterial preparations possessing bactericidal activity should be used for treatment.
  3. Therapy of infectious endocarditis should be continuous and prolonged (for streptococcal infection, at least 4 weeks; for staphylococcal infection, at least 6 weeks).
  4. Treatment should include the creation of a high concentration of antibiotics in the vascular bed (intravenous administration of antibiotics is preferred).
  5. The criteria for discontinuation of antibiotic treatment should be a combination of several effects, including complete normalization of body temperature, normalization of laboratory parameters (disappearance of leukocytosis, neutrophilia, anemia, a clear tendency to decrease the sedimentation rate), negative results of bacterial blood tests, and disappearance of clinical manifestations of disease activity.
  6. In case of increasing signs of immunopathological reactions, glucocorticoids, antiaggregants, and human immunoglobulin are used.
  7. If conservative treatment is ineffective for 4 weeks, surgical treatment is indicated.

How effective is antibacterial therapy?

 

Despite the development of a large number of highly effective antibiotics and various versions of drug therapy  in recent years, the conservative treatment of endocarditis remains extremely difficult. This is due to the increasing frequency of isolation of highly virulent strains of pathogens resistant to therapy with medication, decreasing immunological resistance of most patients, and increasing number of elderly and senile patients getting the disease.

In addition, the effect of antibacterial therapy is largely determined by the extent to which the concentration of antibiotics created in the blood is sufficient to affect the pathogen, localized in the depth of the inflammation focus. The most commonly used antibiotics with bactericidal action for the treatment of infective endocarditis in medical practice include inhibitors of bacterial cell wall synthesis, inhibitors of protein synthesis, and inhibitors of nucleic acid synthesis.

Surgical treatment of endocarditis in hospitals in Germany

 

The essence of surgical intervention for the treatment of endocarditis lies in the radical correction of intracardiac hemodynamics. For this purpose, mechanical removal of infected tissues followed by rational antibiotic therapy is carried out. If necessary, prosthetics of the affected valve can be performed. The best results are observed in patients operated on early infectious endocarditis, with preserved myocardial reserve. The main medical indications for surgical treatment are:

  • Perforation or valve leaflet detachment with the development of acute heart failure.
  • Arterial thromboembolism. Surgical intervention is indicated after the first episode of thromboembolism because the risk of repeated thromboembolisms is quite high.
  • Fibrous valve ring abscesses, since further conservative treatment is the futile and lethal outcome is inevitable.
  • Fungal endocarditis, which is fatal in 100% of cases, if timely surgical intervention is not performed.
  • Infective endocarditis of the valve prosthesis is caused by a particularly virulent flora. Lethality reaches 55% if conservative therapy is continued.
  • Ineffectiveness of therapy with medication for 3-4 weeks (manifested by the persistence of fever, progressive destruction of the valve, etc.).

Who needs medical prophylaxis against endocarditis?

 

To individuals who need to undergo prophylaxis against endocarditis belong:

  • All patients who underwent non-surgical treatment of congenital heart disease except for secondary atrial septal defect, not requiring correction of small interventricular septal defects.
  • All patients who underwent radical surgical correction of congenital heart disease with artificial vascular or valve prostheses for 6 months after surgery.
  • All patients after palliative surgical treatment of congenital heart disease.
  • Patients after endovascular interventions (including diagnostic cardiac catheterization) for 6 months after the intervention.

All of the above categories of patients are also patients of the risk groups for the development of infective endocarditis.

Hospitals in Germany for endocarditis treatment

 

Today, the leading cardiology hospitals in Germany offer comprehensive treatment of endocarditis according to international medical standards, including treatment of related complications. If necessary, doctors can also perform surgical interventions when there is irreversible damage to the heart valves. Highly qualified specialists and the availability of modern, high-tech equipment, as well as the use of innovative and advanced treatment methods, ensure maximum effectiveness of endocarditis treatment in Germany.

On the Booking Health website, you can fill in a request form to get assistance with hospital selection.

The cost of treatment in Germany

 

The average prices both for treatment and diagnostics of endocarditis are as follows:

  • The prices for the establishment of the diagnosis of endocarditis start at 542 EUR.
  • The cost of treatment in Germany with conservative therapy starts at 2,173 EUR.
  • The cost of treatment in Germany with pericardial drainage starts at 6,357 EUR.
  • The prices for cardiac rehabilitation in hospitals in Germany start at 566 EUR.

Booking Health can help you find out the cost of treatment in your clinical case. Just leave a request on the Booking Health website for a medical advisor to contact you.

Authors: Dr. Nadezhda IvanisovaDr. Farrukh Ahmed