pellicle
Professional Dingbat, Guru and Merkintologist
yes, that's my reading, although I'd say that some scarring will occur also when a valve (like a BAV) is sliced out and another valve stitched in too.So in layman’s terms it sounds like the irregular heartbeat causes turbulence which in turn causes the scarring which is what the bacteria is then able to grab hold to.
So if you didn't get an infection (say as **** and a few others here did which was not caused by arrhythmia but did cause scarring on the leaflet / endocardium) before your OHS you may also be more prone to endocarditis just from the scar tissue of the valve surgery (I suspect that this is why there is disagreement / debate on the efficacy / need for antibiotics.
Personally, for myself, there is no debate. I take antibiotics prophylactic cover before dental work.
Pardon me, but I just wanted to toss in one more point: bacteria in the blood stream are sorted out pretty quick by the white blood cells (and other bits). Its when they move from free floating to attached (but not like a barnacle) that they can begin to form a film covering and you get endo.
Some good intro reading:
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18827980/
https://link.springer.com/referenceworkentry/10.1007/0-387-30742-7_1
HTH
PS: Streptococcus is the most common bacteria in endo cases and its a prokaryotic bacteria.