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"We report the case of a 21-year-old woman at 29 weeks and four days of gestation who presented with one-week history of severe epigastric pain, pleuritic chest pain, dyspnoea, and chills. A peripherally inserted central catheter line had been placed at 14 weeks of gestation for outpatient management of hyperemesis gravidarum" Anderson et al (2025).
PICC-associated tricuspid valve endocarditis in pregnancy

Abstract:

We report the case of a 21-year-old woman at 29 weeks and four days of gestation who presented with one-week history of severe epigastric pain, pleuritic chest pain, dyspnoea, and chills. A peripherally inserted central catheter line had been placed at 14 weeks of gestation for outpatient management of hyperemesis gravidarum. Initial investigations included a transthoracic echocardiogram which revealed a large tricuspid valve vegetation with mild tricuspid regurgitation and CT pulmonary angiogram which identified multiple septic pulmonary emboli. Blood cultures grew methicillin-susceptible Staphylococcus aureus. Despite appropriate antimicrobial therapy, they remained bacteraemic and underwent percutaneous mechanical debulking of tricuspid valve infective endocarditis using an AngioVac aspiration thrombectomy device. Their clinical course post-AngioVac was complicated by the development of multiple pulmonary emboli and suspected left-sided empyema. They delivered by caesarean section at 32 weeks and one day of gestation due to maternal health reasons.

Reference:

Anderson L, Nguyen L. PICC-associated tricuspid valve endocarditis in pregnancy managed with AngioVac. Obstet Med. 2025 Apr 24:1753495X251335360. doi: 10.1177/1753495X251335360. Epub ahead of print. PMID: 40291585; PMCID: PMC12031729.

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