COMPARATIVE STUDY
EVALUATION STUDIES
JOURNAL ARTICLE
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Spread of heart diseases seen in an open-access paediatric echocardiography clinic.

All patients <13 years of age referred to the open-access paediatric echocardiography clinic at the Sultan Qaboos University Hospital, Muscat, Oman, during the five years from 1994 to 1998 were analysed. Among the 2633 patients studied, 1543 (58.6%) were normal, 845 (32.1%) had congenital heart disease, and 245 (9.3%) had acquired heart disease. The major congenital heart diseases identified were secundum atrial septal defect (22.5%), ventricular septal defect (22.5%), patent ductus arteriosus (15.7%), mitral valve prolapse (10.7%), pulmonary stenosis (9.7%) and atrioventricular septal defect (4.5%). Fifty-eight percent of the congenital heart diseases were identified in the first year of life. Among the acquired heart diseases, rheumatic heart disease (30.2%) and cardiac involvement secondary to haemoglobinopathies (16.7%), dilated cardiomyopathy (16.3%) and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (12.7%) were significant. Although the presence of specific cardiac symptoms was associated with a high yield of abnormalities, such disorders were also discovered in a significant number of children with isolated cardiac murmur. The referral source did not influence significantly the frequency of heart diseases diagnosed in this study. Open-access echocardiography is important in early detection of heart disease in the paediatric population.

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