Background: Non traumatic gonalgia is the second most common reason for rheumatology consultations and accounted for 15.6% of rheumatological disorders in Abidjan. Objective: The aim of this work was to study the epid...Background: Non traumatic gonalgia is the second most common reason for rheumatology consultations and accounted for 15.6% of rheumatological disorders in Abidjan. Objective: The aim of this work was to study the epidemiological and diagnostic features of non-traumatic gonalgia (NTG) in a black adult population from sub-Saharan Africa. Patients and Methods: This was a five-year retrospective descriptive study (January 2014 to December 2018) of black sub-Saharan African adult patients with non traumatic gonalgia seen in the rheumatology department of the Bouake University Hospital in Côte d’Ivoire. Results: Of 2198 patients seen for rheumatological conditions, 140 had non traumatic gonalgia (6.4%). The mean age of patients was 56.13 ± 13.3 years (extremes 20 and 87 years), and the sex ratio was 0.43 (42 men and 98 women). Gonalgia without swelling was observed in 33.6% of cases. Symptoms were predominantly progressive (97.1%), chronic (82.1%) and bilateral (50%). The causes of TNM were gonarthrosis (85%), septic arthritis (7.1%), reactive arthritis (2.9%), gout (2.9%), rheumatoid arthritis (1.4%) and chondrocalcinosis (0.7%). Gonarthrosis (119/140) was bilateral in 65 patients, bi- or tri-compartmental in 83, radiographic stage (Kellgren and Lawrence) III in 80 and IV in 15. A germ was isolated in two cases of septic arthritis (methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus and Streptococcus pneumoniae). Conclusion: GNT is common in rheumatology practice in Bouake, and mainly affects women in their fifties. It is most often a chronic bilateral gonalgia, with gonarthrosis as the main etiology.展开更多
文摘Background: Non traumatic gonalgia is the second most common reason for rheumatology consultations and accounted for 15.6% of rheumatological disorders in Abidjan. Objective: The aim of this work was to study the epidemiological and diagnostic features of non-traumatic gonalgia (NTG) in a black adult population from sub-Saharan Africa. Patients and Methods: This was a five-year retrospective descriptive study (January 2014 to December 2018) of black sub-Saharan African adult patients with non traumatic gonalgia seen in the rheumatology department of the Bouake University Hospital in Côte d’Ivoire. Results: Of 2198 patients seen for rheumatological conditions, 140 had non traumatic gonalgia (6.4%). The mean age of patients was 56.13 ± 13.3 years (extremes 20 and 87 years), and the sex ratio was 0.43 (42 men and 98 women). Gonalgia without swelling was observed in 33.6% of cases. Symptoms were predominantly progressive (97.1%), chronic (82.1%) and bilateral (50%). The causes of TNM were gonarthrosis (85%), septic arthritis (7.1%), reactive arthritis (2.9%), gout (2.9%), rheumatoid arthritis (1.4%) and chondrocalcinosis (0.7%). Gonarthrosis (119/140) was bilateral in 65 patients, bi- or tri-compartmental in 83, radiographic stage (Kellgren and Lawrence) III in 80 and IV in 15. A germ was isolated in two cases of septic arthritis (methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus and Streptococcus pneumoniae). Conclusion: GNT is common in rheumatology practice in Bouake, and mainly affects women in their fifties. It is most often a chronic bilateral gonalgia, with gonarthrosis as the main etiology.