Cardiomyopathies in Tropical Countries: Causes and Nosological Perspective
Abstract
Background: Cardiomyopathy is the main cause of heart failure in developing countries, mainly in Africa. In those
areas the concept of “tropical cardiomyopathy” is still used to design all unexplained cardiomyopathy. The primary aim
of this review is first to review the main etiologies of cardiomyopathies observed in tropical countries and second to
gain a better understanding of the nosological place of the so-called “tropical cardiomyopathies” in the current framework
of cardiomyopathies. Methods and Results: We reviewed relevant references over the last forty years (June,
1976 to May 2012). Given literature data, endomyocardial fibrosis (EMF) is mainly diagnosed in sub-Saharan countries,
as well as Brazil and India. Peripartum cardiomyopathy (PPCM) is observed with a higher prevalence than in temperate
countries. Sickle cell anemia does not induce specific cardiomyopathy in all echocardiographic studies. Malnutrition
and chronic anemia can induce reversible cardiac dysfunction. Myocardial involvement in parasitic infections is restricted
to Chagas disease and probably to human African trypanosomiasis. Helminthiasis is not involved in the pathogenesis
of cardiomyopathy except for the deleterious effect of high eosinophilia induced by some endemic diseases (filariasis,
schistosomiasis). Primary cardiomyopathies (dilated, hypertrophic, and restrictive cardiomyopathy) have no
specificity. Arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia and left ventricular noncompaction are also reported and do not
differ from elsewhere. Conclusions: The concept of tropical cardiomyopathy is no longer relevant as most of the cardiomyopathies
observed in tropical countries have no specificity, with few exceptions (PPCM, EMF, Chagas disease).
In this context, the European Society of Cardiology classification offers a simpler clinical approach and allows the inclusion
of the rare tropical specificities