%0 Journal Article
%T Pericarditis in Cardiology at a Regional Hospital
%A Coulibaly Souleymane
%A Traoré
%A Djé
%A né
%A bou
%A Konaté
%A Massama
%A B. A. Hamidou Oumar
%A Guindo Aissata
%A Yves Roland Koumaré
%A Sidibé
%A Samba
%A Sako Mariam
%A Sanogo Alpha
%A Kodio Anié
%A ssa
%A Mahamadou Yaya Ké
%A ita
%A Diakité
%A Mamadou
%A Menta Ichaka
%J World Journal of Cardiovascular Diseases
%P 581-587
%@ 2164-5337
%D 2024
%I Scientific Research Publishing
%R 10.4236/wjcd.2024.149050
%X Introduction: Pericarditis is an inflammation of the pericardium with or without pericardial fluid effusion. Its prevalence is difficult to determine given the many forms that are not symptomatic. In Africa, its prevalence was 6.3% in Gabon in 2020 and 7.2% in Mali in 2022. In Europe, an Italian study estimates the incidence of acute pericarditis at 27.7 cases per 100,000 people per year. In another study conducted in Finland over a period of 9 years, the incidence of pericarditis requiring hospitalisation was 3.32 cases per 100,000 people per year. The aim of our study was to describe the clinical and paraclinical characteristics of pericarditis observed in the cardiology department of the regional hospital in Mali. Methodology: This was a single centre cross-sectional study from 30 January 2018 to 30 June 2020 in the cardiology department of the Ségou regional hospital. All consenting patients, regardless of age or sex hospitalised in the department for pericarditis confirmed on cardiac ultrasound were included. Data were collected using an individual patient follow-up form recording sociodemographic, clinical, biological, electrocardiographic and echocardiographic data, as well as the course of the disease. Results: Out of 879 patients hospitalized, the hospital frequency was 7.28%. Females predominated, with a sex ratio of 0.42. More than half the patients were aged 45 or younger (59.4%). The mean age of patients was 41.8 ± 18.1 years. Cardiovascular risk factors were dominated by hypertension and smoking (46.9% and 12.5% respectively). The reasons for consultation were dyspnoea (84.3%), chest pain (54.7%), cough (71.9%) and fever (34.4%). Physical signs included muffled heart sounds (76.6%), tachycardia (70.3%), pericardial friction (17.2%) and signs of peripheral stasis in 53.1% of cases. We observed elevated C-reactive protein (CRP) in 57.8% of cases, hypercreatininaemia in 37.5% and positive HIV serology in 3.1%. The major radiographic signs were cardiomegaly in 82.8% and pleural effusion in 37.5%. On electrocardiogram (ECG), 51.6% of patients had a repolarisation disorder and sinus tachycardia; 34.4% had QRS microvoltage. Echocardiography revealed tamponade in 1.6% and pericardial effusion in 100%. The effusion was very large in 17.3% of cases. The pericardial fluid was citrine yellow in 18.8%, serosanguineous in 9.4% and haemorrhagic in 7.8%. The aetiology of the pericarditis was idiopathic in 42.1% and secondary to HIV in 3.1%. Transudative fluid was observed in 16.5% of cases. The outcome was generally
%K Pericarditis
%K Epidemiology
%K Clinic
%K Nianankoro Fomba Hospital
%K Sé
%K gou
%U http://www.scirp.org/journal/PaperInformation.aspx?PaperID=136201