Nonbacterial Thrombotic Endocarditis (NBTE)
Overview
Plain-Language Overview
Nonbacterial Thrombotic Endocarditis (NBTE) is a condition that affects the heart valves, where small clumps of blood clots and fibrin form on the valve surfaces without infection. These clumps can interfere with the normal function of the heart valves, potentially causing problems with blood flow. The condition is often linked to other serious illnesses like cancer or autoimmune diseases, which increase the risk of abnormal clotting. NBTE can lead to complications if pieces of the clots break off and travel to other parts of the body, causing stroke or organ damage. It primarily involves the cardiovascular system and can be difficult to detect because it does not cause typical infection symptoms.
Clinical Definition
Nonbacterial Thrombotic Endocarditis (NBTE) is characterized by the formation of sterile, fibrin-platelet vegetations on cardiac valves, typically the mitral and aortic valves. These vegetations occur without bacterial or fungal infection and are commonly associated with a hypercoagulable state, often secondary to malignancy, systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), or other chronic inflammatory conditions. The pathogenesis involves endothelial injury and a prothrombotic milieu leading to deposition of thrombi on valve leaflets. NBTE is clinically significant due to its potential to cause systemic embolization, resulting in ischemic infarcts in the brain, kidneys, or spleen. Unlike infective endocarditis, NBTE vegetations are typically small, friable, and lack inflammatory cells. Diagnosis is challenging and often made postmortem or by echocardiography in the context of embolic phenomena and underlying risk factors.