ABSTRACT
ABSTRACT Infective endocarditis is less likely to sparkle out preferentially in our minds when evaluating and making differential diagnosis of patients with fever daily in emergency departments. We describe a case of infective endocarditis. He was initially diagnosed with pyelonephritis of the right kidney at a hospital because of the noted right flank knocking pain. His computed tomography showed two wedge-shaped low-density lesions in the spleen and the right kidney separately. It dropped a hint to the emergency department physician of thinking of the feature of infarct. The previously neglected cardiac murmurs were then an important clue. We then performed transthoracic emergent echocardiography and confirmed the diagnosis of infective endocarditis.