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P120 The burden of the management of cerebral aneurysms in Africa: a scoping review

INTRODUCTION: In Africa, the epidemiology, management, and prognosis of cerebral aneurysms remain poorly understood. Cerebral aneurysms are still highly underdiagnosed and inadequately treated in Africa due to a lack of vascular neurosurgeons and infrastructure. In this review we mapped the burden a...

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Autores principales: Tetinou, Francklin, Kanmounye, Ulrick Sidney, Nitcheu, Igor, Ndajiwo, Aliyu Baba, Bankole, Nourou Dine A
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8153800/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/bjsopen/zrab032.119
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author Tetinou, Francklin
Kanmounye, Ulrick Sidney
Nitcheu, Igor
Ndajiwo, Aliyu Baba
Bankole, Nourou Dine A
author_facet Tetinou, Francklin
Kanmounye, Ulrick Sidney
Nitcheu, Igor
Ndajiwo, Aliyu Baba
Bankole, Nourou Dine A
author_sort Tetinou, Francklin
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: In Africa, the epidemiology, management, and prognosis of cerebral aneurysms remain poorly understood. Cerebral aneurysms are still highly underdiagnosed and inadequately treated in Africa due to a lack of vascular neurosurgeons and infrastructure. In this review we mapped the burden and management of intracerebral aneurysm in Africa. METHODS: A full systematic search on articles published in Africa on brain aneurysms was performed in PubMed, African Journals Online, Google Scholar, WHO Global Health Library and LILACS with no language restrictions. The search results were merged, uploaded into Rayyan software, (FDT, USK, IN, NDAB) independently based on the pre-defined inclusion and exclusion criteria. The full text of the remaining articles were then retrieved and screened by three reviewers independently (FDT, USK, NDAB). Conflicts were resolved by mutual agreement. From all included documents, we extracted information regarding study design, socio-demographic characteristics, clinical findings, type of treatment and outcome results. RESULTS: We included 28 articles in our full text retrieval. These studies totaled 1181 patients managed for cerebral aneurysm in Africa. Half (50.0%; n = 14) of all studies had been published in the past 5 years and nearly half (46.4%; n = 13) of these studies were conducted in two countries: eight in Morocco and five in South Africa, we didn’t found any publication on cerebral aneurysm for nearly 80% of African countries. Also, there was a female predominance among cerebral aneurysm study participants (62.5%), and the mean time from diagnosis to surgery was 12.1 days. Cerebral aneurysms were most often located in the internal carotid artery (29.6%) and anterior cerebral artery (23.2%). Microneurosurgery (67%) was the most widely used option in these studies ahead of coiling (7.9%). Patient outcomes were judged favorable in 64.2% of cases, and the mortality rate following surgical (open vascular and endovascular) intervention was 19.4%. CONCLUSION: The management of intracerebral aneurysms remains suboptimal in Africa. There are few peer-reviewed reports of aneurysm practice.
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spelling pubmed-81538002021-05-28 P120 The burden of the management of cerebral aneurysms in Africa: a scoping review Tetinou, Francklin Kanmounye, Ulrick Sidney Nitcheu, Igor Ndajiwo, Aliyu Baba Bankole, Nourou Dine A BJS Open Poster Presentation INTRODUCTION: In Africa, the epidemiology, management, and prognosis of cerebral aneurysms remain poorly understood. Cerebral aneurysms are still highly underdiagnosed and inadequately treated in Africa due to a lack of vascular neurosurgeons and infrastructure. In this review we mapped the burden and management of intracerebral aneurysm in Africa. METHODS: A full systematic search on articles published in Africa on brain aneurysms was performed in PubMed, African Journals Online, Google Scholar, WHO Global Health Library and LILACS with no language restrictions. The search results were merged, uploaded into Rayyan software, (FDT, USK, IN, NDAB) independently based on the pre-defined inclusion and exclusion criteria. The full text of the remaining articles were then retrieved and screened by three reviewers independently (FDT, USK, NDAB). Conflicts were resolved by mutual agreement. From all included documents, we extracted information regarding study design, socio-demographic characteristics, clinical findings, type of treatment and outcome results. RESULTS: We included 28 articles in our full text retrieval. These studies totaled 1181 patients managed for cerebral aneurysm in Africa. Half (50.0%; n = 14) of all studies had been published in the past 5 years and nearly half (46.4%; n = 13) of these studies were conducted in two countries: eight in Morocco and five in South Africa, we didn’t found any publication on cerebral aneurysm for nearly 80% of African countries. Also, there was a female predominance among cerebral aneurysm study participants (62.5%), and the mean time from diagnosis to surgery was 12.1 days. Cerebral aneurysms were most often located in the internal carotid artery (29.6%) and anterior cerebral artery (23.2%). Microneurosurgery (67%) was the most widely used option in these studies ahead of coiling (7.9%). Patient outcomes were judged favorable in 64.2% of cases, and the mortality rate following surgical (open vascular and endovascular) intervention was 19.4%. CONCLUSION: The management of intracerebral aneurysms remains suboptimal in Africa. There are few peer-reviewed reports of aneurysm practice. Oxford University Press 2021-04-08 /pmc/articles/PMC8153800/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/bjsopen/zrab032.119 Text en © The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of BJS Society Ltd. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) ), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercialre-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Poster Presentation
Tetinou, Francklin
Kanmounye, Ulrick Sidney
Nitcheu, Igor
Ndajiwo, Aliyu Baba
Bankole, Nourou Dine A
P120 The burden of the management of cerebral aneurysms in Africa: a scoping review
title P120 The burden of the management of cerebral aneurysms in Africa: a scoping review
title_full P120 The burden of the management of cerebral aneurysms in Africa: a scoping review
title_fullStr P120 The burden of the management of cerebral aneurysms in Africa: a scoping review
title_full_unstemmed P120 The burden of the management of cerebral aneurysms in Africa: a scoping review
title_short P120 The burden of the management of cerebral aneurysms in Africa: a scoping review
title_sort p120 the burden of the management of cerebral aneurysms in africa: a scoping review
topic Poster Presentation
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8153800/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/bjsopen/zrab032.119
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