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SUBACUTE BACTERIAL ENDOCARDITIS DUE TO STREPTOBACILLUS MONILIFORMIS

EDWARD S. PETERSEN, M.D.; NORMAN B. McCULLOUGH, Ph.D., M.D.; C. WESLEY EISELE, M.D.; JAMES M. GOLDINGER, M.D.
JAMA. 1950;144(8):621-622. doi:10.1001/jama.1950.62920080007006f.
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Cases of rat bite fever due to Streptobacillus moniliformis have been extensively reported in recent years, and this disease has been distinguished from that due to Spirillum minus.1 Bacterial endocarditis due to S. moniliformis has been reported rarely, a survey of the literature revealing but four cases of this complication.2 An additional unpublished case has come to our knowledge.3 All these cases have ended fatally. Three of them occurred in the prepenicillin era, and two occurred soon after the use of penicillin was begun and prior to the recognition of the importance of massive doses of the drug in the treatment of endocarditis. The value of penicillin in S. moniliformis infections was experimentally demonstrated by Heilman,4 and this drug has been shown to be clinically effective by many workers.5 The present case is reported because it is the first apparent cure of subacute bacterial endocarditis

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