Bacteria endocarditis secondary to the patient’s throat infection though low is a possible cause of the patient’s current symptoms, especially in the light of his new systolic ejection murmur. The presentation of bacterial endocarditis can be vague, patients can present with fever, sweating, chills, loss of appetite or weight loss, pallor, headache, weakness, or tiredness. Our patient have several of these symptoms. Additionally established infections often cause a normocytic-normochromic anemia, elevated WBC count, increased ESR, increased immunoglobulin levels, and the presence of circulating immune complexes and rheumatoid factor. Though the WBC count is low in our patient, this does not preclude the diagnosis since not every single one of these factor is necessary for the
Bacteria endocarditis secondary to the patient’s throat infection though low is a possible cause of the patient’s current symptoms, especially in the light of his new systolic ejection murmur. The presentation of bacterial endocarditis can be vague, patients can present with fever, sweating, chills, loss of appetite or weight loss, pallor, headache, weakness, or tiredness. Our patient have several of these symptoms. Additionally established infections often cause a normocytic-normochromic anemia, elevated WBC count, increased ESR, increased immunoglobulin levels, and the presence of circulating immune complexes and rheumatoid factor. Though the WBC count is low in our patient, this does not preclude the diagnosis since not every single one of these factor is necessary for the