RESUMO
During 1978, and 1979, the Surgery Division of The Cardiology and Pneumology Hospital of The National Medical Center (Mexican Institute for Social Security), studied and treated surgically twenty one cases -- in twenty patients -- of infectious endocarditis. Nine patients had an active infection in the heart valves and twelve in the prosthesis. The survival rate of the first group was 88.88% and of the second group 58.33%. The causes of death were due to the hemodynamic damage that the valvular or prosthetic dysfunction leads to, when there is a delay in the arrival of the patient to a medical unit of third level. The conventional medical treatment applicable to a reduced number of cases whose characteristics are discussed do not operate when dealing with patients with infected prosthesis or valve infections caused by non-gram positive bacteria. We conclude that this problem demands a better approach, principally surgical, to improve the prognosis of these patients.