Native Valve Endocarditis
▸ Highly PCN Susceptible, Adult
▸ Highly PCN Susceptible, Pediatric
▸ Relatively PCN Resistant, Adult
▸ Relatively PCN Resistant, Pediatric
Prosthetic Valve Endocarditis
▸ PCN Susceptible, Pediatric
▸ PCN Resistant, Pediatric
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Viridans Streptococci or S. bovis NVE, Penicillin MIC ≤0.12 μg/mL, Adult
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Preferred Regimen†
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▸ Penicillin G 12—18 MU/day IV continuously or q4—6h x 4 weeks OR ▸ Ceftriaxone 2 g IV/IM q24h x 4 weeks
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Alternative Regimen 1‡
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▸ Penicillin G 12—18 MU/day IV continuously or q4—6h x 2 weeks OR ▸ Ceftriaxone 2 g IV/IM q24h x 2 weeks
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PLUS
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▸ Gentamicin 3 mg/kg IV/IM q24h (or 1 mg/kg IV/IM q8h) x 2 weeks¶
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Alternative Regimen 2
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▸ Vancomycin 15 mg/kg IV q12h x 4 weeksǁ
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† Preferred in most patients greater than 65 y of age or patients with impairment of 8th cranial nerve function or renal function. ‡ Two-week regimen not intended for patients with known cardiac or extracardiac abscess or for those with creatinine clearance of less than 20 ml per min, impaired 8th cranial nerve function, or Abiotrophia, Granulicatella, or Gemella infection. ¶ Gentamicin dosage should be adjusted to achieve peak serum concentration of 3—4 μg/ml and trough serum concentration of less than 1 μg/ml when 3 divided doses are used; nomogram used for single daily dosing; other potentially nephrotoxic drugs (e.g., nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs) should be used with caution in patients receiving gentamicin therapy. ǁ Recommended only for patients unable to tolerate penicillin or ceftriaxone. Vancomycin doses should not exceed 2 g per 24 h, unless serum concentrations are inappropriately low. Dosage should be adjusted to obtain peak (1 h after infusion completed) serum concentration of 30–45 μg/ml and a trough concentration range of 10–15 μg/ml. Vancomycin should be infused during course of at least 1 h to reduce risk of histamine-release red man syndrome.
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Viridans Streptococci or S. bovis NVE, Penicillin MIC ≤0.12 μg/mL, Pediatric
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Preferred Regimen†
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▸ Penicillin G 0.2 MU/kg/day IV q4—6h x 4 weeks OR ▸ Ceftriaxone 100 mg/kg IV/IM q24h x 4 weeks
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Alternative Regimen 1‡
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▸ Penicillin G 0.2 MU/kg/day IV q4—6h x 2 weeks OR ▸ Ceftriaxone 100 mg/kg IV/IM q24h x 2 weeks
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PLUS
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▸ Gentamicin 3 mg/kg IV/IM q24h (or 1 mg/kg IV/IM q8h) x 2 weeks¶
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Alternative Regimen 2
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▸ Vancomycin 40 mg/kg/day IV q8—12h x 4 weeksǁ
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† Preferred in most patients greater than 65 y of age or patients with impairment of 8th cranial nerve function or renal function. ‡ Two-week regimen not intended for patients with known cardiac or extracardiac abscess or for those with creatinine clearance of less than 20 ml per min, impaired 8th cranial nerve function, or Abiotrophia, Granulicatella, or Gemella infection. ¶ Gentamicin dosage should be adjusted to achieve peak serum concentration of 3—4 μg/ml and trough serum concentration of less than 1 μg/ml when 3 divided doses are used; nomogram used for single daily dosing; other potentially nephrotoxic drugs (e.g., nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs) should be used with caution in patients receiving gentamicin therapy. ǁ Recommended only for patients unable to tolerate penicillin or ceftriaxone. Vancomycin doses should not exceed 2 g per 24 h, unless serum concentrations are inappropriately low. Dosage should be adjusted to obtain peak (1 h after infusion completed) serum concentration of 30–45 μg/ml and a trough concentration range of 10–15 μg/ml. Vancomycin should be infused during course of at least 1 h to reduce risk of histamine-release red man syndrome.
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Viridans Streptococci or S. bovis NVE, Penicillin MIC >0.12 to ≤0.5 μg/ml, Adult
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Preferred Regimen
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▸ Penicillin G 24 MU/day IV continuously or q4—6h x 4 weeks† OR ▸ Ceftriaxone 2 g IV/IM q24h x 4 weeks‡
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PLUS
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▸ Gentamicin 3 mg/kg IV/IM q24h (1 mg/kg IV/IM q8h) x 2 weeks¶
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Alternative Regimen
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▸ Vancomycin 15 mg/kg IV q12h x 4 weeksǁ
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† Patients with endocarditis caused by Penicillin Resistant (MIC greater than 0.5 μg/ml) strains should be treated with regimen recommended for enterococcal endocarditis. ‡ Recommended for enterococcal endocarditis. ¶ Gentamicin dosage should be adjusted to achieve peak serum concentration of 3—4 μg/ml and trough serum concentration of less than 1 μg/ml when 3 divided doses are used; nomogram used for single daily dosing; other potentially nephrotoxic drugs (e.g., nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs) should be used with caution in patients receiving gentamicin therapy. ǁ Recommended only for patients unable to tolerate penicillin or ceftriaxone. Vancomycin doses should not exceed 2 g per 24 h, unless serum concentrations are inappropriately low. Dosage should be adjusted to obtain peak (1 h after infusion completed) serum concentration of 30–45 μg/ml and a trough concentration range of 10–15 μg/ml. Vancomycin should be infused during course of at least 1 h to reduce risk of histamine-release red man syndrome.
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Viridans Streptococci or S. bovis NVE, Penicillin MIC >0.12 to ≤0.5 μg/ml, Pediatric
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Preferred Regimen
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▸ Penicillin G 0.3 MU/kg/day IV q4—6h x 4 weeks† OR ▸ Ceftriaxone 100 mg/kg IV/IM q24h x 4 weeks‡
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PLUS
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▸ Gentamicin 3 mg/kg IV/IM q24h (or 1 mg/kg IV/IM q8h) x 2 weeks¶
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Alternative Regimen
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▸ Vancomycin 40 mg/kg IV q8—12h x 4 weeksǁ
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† Patients with endocarditis caused by Penicillin Resistant (MIC greater than 0.5 μg/ml) strains should be treated with regimen recommended for enterococcal endocarditis. ‡ Recommended for enterococcal endocarditis. ¶ Gentamicin dosage should be adjusted to achieve peak serum concentration of 3—4 μg/ml and trough serum concentration of less than 1 μg/ml when 3 divided doses are used; nomogram used for single daily dosing; other potentially nephrotoxic drugs (e.g., nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs) should be used with caution in patients receiving gentamicin therapy. ǁ Recommended only for patients unable to tolerate penicillin or ceftriaxone. Vancomycin doses should not exceed 2 g per 24 h, unless serum concentrations are inappropriately low. Dosage should be adjusted to obtain peak (1 h after infusion completed) serum concentration of 30–45 μg/ml and a trough concentration range of 10–15 μg/ml. Vancomycin should be infused during course of at least 1 h to reduce risk of histamine-release red man syndrome.
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Viridans Streptococci or S. bovis NVE, Penicillin MIC >0.5 μg/ml
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▸ Endocarditis caused by highly penicillin resistant (MIC >0.5 μg/ml) strains of viridans streptococci, Abiotrophia defectiva, Granulicatella species, and Gemella species should be treated with a regimen that is recommended for enterococcal endocarditis.
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Viridans Streptococci or S. bovis PVE, Penicillin MIC ≤0.12 μg/ml, Adult
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Preferred Regimen
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▸ Penicillin G 24 MU/day IV continuously or q4—6h x 6 weeks OR ▸ Ceftriaxone 2 g IV/IM q24h x 6 weeks
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WITH OR WITHOUT
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▸ Gentamicin 3 mg/kg IV/IM q24h (or 1 mg/kg IV/IM q8h) x 2 weeks¶
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Alternative Regimen
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▸ Vancomycin 15 mg/kg IV q12h x 6 weeksǁ
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¶ Gentamicin therapy should not be administered to patients with creatinine clearance of <30 mL/min ǁ Recommended only for patients unable to tolerate penicillin or ceftriaxone. Vancomycin doses should not exceed 2 g per 24 h, unless serum concentrations are inappropriately low. Dosage should be adjusted to obtain peak (1 h after infusion completed) serum concentration of 30–45 μg/ml and a trough concentration range of 10–15 μg/ml. Vancomycin should be infused during course of at least 1 h to reduce risk of histamine-release red man syndrome.
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Viridans Streptococci or S. bovis PVE, Penicillin MIC ≤0.12 μg/ml, Pediatric
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Preferred Regimen
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▸ Penicillin G 0.3 MU/kg/day IV q4—6h x 6 weeks OR ▸ Ceftriaxone 100 mg/kg IV/IM q24h x 6 weeks
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WITH OR WITHOUT
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▸ Gentamicin 3 mg/kg IV/IM q24h (or 1 mg/kg IV/IM q8h) x 2 weeks¶
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Alternative Regimen
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▸ Vancomycin 40 mg/kg/day IV q8—12h x 6 weeksǁ
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¶ Gentamicin dosage should be adjusted to achieve peak serum concentration of 3—4 μg/ml and trough serum concentration of less than 1 μg/ml when 3 divided doses are used; nomogram used for single daily dosing; other potentially nephrotoxic drugs (e.g., nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs) should be used with caution in patients receiving gentamicin therapy. ǁ Recommended only for patients unable to tolerate penicillin or ceftriaxone. Vancomycin doses should not exceed 2 g per 24 h, unless serum concentrations are inappropriately low. Dosage should be adjusted to obtain peak (1 h after infusion completed) serum concentration of 30–45 μg/ml and a trough concentration range of 10–15 μg/ml. Vancomycin should be infused during course of at least 1 h to reduce risk of histamine-release red man syndrome.
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Viridans Streptococci or S. bovis PVE, Penicillin MIC >0.12 μg/ml, Adult
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Preferred Regimen
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▸ Penicillin G 24 MU/day IV continuously or q4—6h x 6 weeks OR ▸ Ceftriaxone 2 g IV/IM q24h x 6 weeks
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PLUS
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▸ Gentamicin 3 mg/kg IV/IM q24h (or 1 mg/kg IV/IM q8h) x 6 weeks¶
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Alternative Regimen
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▸ Vancomycin 15 mg/kg IV q12h x 6 weeksǁ
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¶ Gentamicin dosage should be adjusted to achieve peak serum concentration of 3—4 μg/ml and trough serum concentration of less than 1 μg/ml when 3 divided doses are used; nomogram used for single daily dosing; other potentially nephrotoxic drugs (e.g., nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs) should be used with caution in patients receiving gentamicin therapy. ǁ Recommended only for patients unable to tolerate penicillin or ceftriaxone. Vancomycin doses should not exceed 2 g per 24 h, unless serum concentrations are inappropriately low. Dosage should be adjusted to obtain peak (1 h after infusion completed) serum concentration of 30–45 μg/ml and a trough concentration range of 10–15 μg/ml. Vancomycin should be infused during course of at least 1 h to reduce risk of histamine-release red man syndrome.
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Viridans Streptococci or S. bovis PVE, Penicillin MIC >0.12 μg/ml, Pediatric
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Preferred Regimen
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▸ Penicillin G 0.3 MU/kg/day IV q4—6h x 6 weeks OR ▸ Ceftriaxone 100 mg/kg IV/IM q24h x 6 weeks
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PLUS
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▸ Gentamicin 3 mg/kg IV/IM q24h (or 1 mg/kg IV/IM q8h) x 6 weeks¶
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Alternative Regimen
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▸ Vancomycin 40 mg/kg/day IV q8—12h x 6 weeksǁ
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¶ Gentamicin dosage should be adjusted to achieve peak serum concentration of 3—4 μg/ml and trough serum concentration of less than 1 μg/ml when 3 divided doses are used; nomogram used for single daily dosing; other potentially nephrotoxic drugs (e.g., nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs) should be used with caution in patients receiving gentamicin therapy. ǁ Recommended only for patients unable to tolerate penicillin or ceftriaxone. Vancomycin doses should not exceed 2 g per 24 h, unless serum concentrations are inappropriately low. Dosage should be adjusted to obtain peak (1 h after infusion completed) serum concentration of 30–45 μg/ml and a trough concentration range of 10–15 μg/ml. Vancomycin should be infused during course of at least 1 h to reduce risk of histamine-release red man syndrome.
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