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While many high-income countries observe a relative decline in the population impact of heart disease and deal with the problem of an older patient population who readily survive earlier non-fatal encounters with the condition, Africa contends with a typically younger population with frequently advanced and often fatal heart disease. While high-income countries exclusively deal with non-communicable forms of heart disease, Africa contends with both communicable and non-communicable forms of heart disease.
Designed to provide anyone with an interest in heart disease in Africa with an immediate sense of how the area is progressing from a clinical to research perspective in responding to this evolving epidemic
Presents salient research uncovering the evolving burden of communicable and non-communicable forms of heart disease,
Includes content on maternal heart disease, infant and childhood heart disease, risk and prevention, heart failure and other common forms of heart disease in rural and urban communities in Africa.
Auteur
Simon Stewart PhD, NFESC, FAHA, FCSANZ
Mary MacKillop Institute for Health Research,
Australian Catholic University,
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Karen Sliwa MD, PhD, FESC, FACC
Hatter Institute for Cardiovascular Research in Africa, Department of Medicine,
Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Cape Town, South Africa;
Soweto Cardiovascular Research Group, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand.
Ana Mocumbi MD, PhD, FESC
Instituto Nacional de Saude Ministerio da Saude Doencas Cronicas
Nao Transmissiveis Instituto
Maputo, Mocambique
Albertino Damasceno MD, PhD
Departamento de Medicina/Faculdade de Medicina
Universidade Eduardo Mondlane
Maputo, Moçambique
Mpiko Ntsekhe MD, PhD, FACC
Division of Cardiology
Department of Medicine,
University of Cape Town,
Groote Schuur Hospital
Cape Town, South Africa
Contenu
List of contributors vii
Foreword x
Preface xii
Acknowledgments xiv
Sub?-Saharan Africa and The Heart of Africa: A brief introduction 1
Section 1: Maternal heart health
Karen Sliwa
1 Maternal heart health 9
Karen Sliwa, John Anthony, and Denise Hilfiker-Kleiner
References 27
Section 2: Infant and childhood heart disease
Ana Mocumbi
2 Congenital heart disease 35
Ana Mocumbi, Tantchou Tchoumi Jacques Cabral, John Musuku, and Serigne A. Ba
3 Acquired heart disease 44
Ana Mocumbi, Liesl Zühlke, and Peter Zilla
References 63
Section 3: Spectrum of cardiovascular risk and heart disease in sub-Saharan Africa
Simon Stewart
4 Cardiovascular risk in urban and rural African settings 73
Kemi Tibazarwa, Karen Sliwa, Melinda Jane Carrington, Okechukwu Samuel Ogah, and Simon Stewart
5 The African INTERHEART study 89
Krisela Steyn and Karen Sliwa
6 The spectrum of heart disease in urban Africans: The Heart of Soweto Study 96
Melinda Jane Carrington, Karen Sliwa, and Simon Stewart
References 113
Section 4: Infectious heart disease
Mpiko Ntsekhe
7 Rheumatic heart disease 121
Simon Stewart, Melinda Jane Carrington, and Karen Sliwa
8 Pericardial disease 136
Mpiko Ntsekhe
9 Human immunodeficiency virusrelated heart disease 145
Friedrich Thienemann, Melinda Jane Carrington, Karen Sliwa, Mpiko Ntsekhe, and Simon Stewart
References 152
Section 5: Noncommunicable disease
Albertino Damasceno
10 Acute coronary syndrome in the African context 159
Anthony Becker
11 Stroke in the African context 176
Albertino Damasceno
References 183
Section 6: Heart failure
Simon Stewart
12 Acute heart failure 193
Mahmoud Sani, Dike Bevis Ojji, Anastase Dzudie, and Okechukwu Samuel Ogah
13 Hypertensive heart failure 212
Dike Bevis Ojji, Mahmoud Sani, Anastase Dzudie, and Okechukwu Samuel Ogah
14 Chronic heart failure 226
Okechukwu Samuel Ogah, Anastase Dzudie, Dike Bevis Ojji, and Mahmoud Sani
15 Pulmonary hypertension and right heart failure 237
Anastase Dzudie, Friedrich Thienemann, Okechukwu Samuel Ogah, Dike Bevis Ojji, and Mahmoud Sani
References 245
Abbreviations 254
Index 256