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Cardiac Disease of Obscure Origin in Africa

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posted on 2024-09-05, 22:43 authored by Michael Gelfand
Within recent years a number of papers have emanated from East, West, Central and South Africa, all reporting a form or forms of congestive heart failure, the etiology of which remains obscure. Interest in this subject began in 1946, when Bedford and Konstam published a series of 40 cases of unexplained heart disease in African troops, mostly from West Africa, serving in the Middle East. There were earlier references in the literature to peculiar aspects of heart disease in Africans. Although the cause may have been incorrectly attributed, the fact remains that these men had the good sense and courage to publish their findings. For instance, Macfie and Ingram (1920) reported the occurrence of cardiac aneurysm of uncertain cause in the African of the West Coast, which occurred in either childhood or adult life. The aneurysm could be situated in an auricle, ventricle or in one of the heart valves. It not frequently ruptured with the supervention of sudden death. In other cases the heart failed gradually.

A Central African Journal of Medicine (CAJM) article on heart disease in Africa.

History

Publisher

Faculty of Medicine, Central African Journal of Medicine (CAJM), University College of Rhodesia (now University of Zimbabwe)

Citation

Gelfand, M. (1958) Cardiac Disease of Obscure Origin in Africa, Central African Journal of Medicine (CAJM) vol. 4, no.9. (pp.364-371) University of Zimbabwe (formerly University College of Rhodesia), Harare (formerly Salisbury) : Faculty of Medicine.

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Article

Copyright holder

University of Zimbabwe (UZ) (formerly University College of Rhodesia)

Country

Africa.

Language

en

Identifier ISSN

0008-9176

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    University of Zimbabwe Social Sciences Research

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