Ultrastructure of a late-stage bacterial endocarditis valve vegetation.

2020 
Infective endocarditis (IE) remains a severe illness with high mortality rate, despite advances in antibiotic therapy and cardiac surgery. If infectious bacteria and platelets are two key players of human IE vegetation developmental process, their interactions and respective roles in fully developed late-stage IE vegetations remain obscure. The objective of this study was to better understand the organization of the different components of the IE vegetation and to provide a detailed description of this vegetation ultrastructure. A late stage Staphylococcal endocarditic vegetation was provided from a 13 years teenager patient. After reception of the surgical piece, we carried out a histological study using routine methods, notably the hematoxylin-eosin-saffron staining. Labeling with the anti-CD 61 antibody was also carried out. In a second step, we used transmission electron microscopy to describe the different regions making up the vegetation. Our ultrastructural study revealed vegetation was clearly composed by three different regions and identified the specific location of the bacteria and platelets in the vegetation tissues. Histological analysis showed that platelets and Staphylococcus aureus were not co-localized. Electron microscopy study confirmed that S. aureus were found at distance from platelets, as well from immune cells, embedded in a biofilm and/or a necrotic area. These results reveal a development of a deep bacteria-only niche in vegetation, raising questions about medication access to these microorganisms. Vegetation composed of three regions: a region rich in bacteria incorporated into the necrotic tissue, the second region composed of fibrin filaments and the third region rich in platelets and free of bacteria.
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