Metabolic Syndrome: Epidemiological, Clinical and Biological Profiles in the Cardiology and Internal Medicine Departments of the Mother-Child CHU “Luxembourg”

Introduction: The metabolic syndrome is a clinical entity defined by the association in the same subject of four of the following five factors: abdominal obesity (or android), type 2 diabetes, hypertension, hypo HDL cholesterolemia, hypertriglyceridemia. The aim of the work was to study the epidemiological, clinical-biological profiles and complications of patients in the cardiology and internal medicine department of the Mother-Child CHU “Luxembourg”. Materials and Methods: We carried out a cross-sectional study, from September 2019 to June 2020 in the cardiology and internal department of the mother-child CHU “Luxembourg”. All patients with metabolic syndrome admitted to the two departments who agreed to participate during the study period were included in the study. These patients meet the 2009 harmonization attempt criteria (IDF 2009). The variables studied were: socio-demographic characteristics (sex, age, profession), pathological history, clinical signs (functional signs, BMI, waist size), paraclinical signs (ECG, cardiac ultrasound, laboratory assessment) and complications. Results: A total of 104 patients were included. The female sex represented 58.65% of cases. The 60 to 69 age group was the majority with 40.78%, housewives occupied 41.34% of cases. Diabetes, arterial hypertension and dyslipidemia were the most represented cardiovascular risk factors with respectively: 80.77%, How to cite this paper: Keita, A., Sonfo, B., Daffé, S., Fofana, D., Thiam, C., Doucouré, O., Diallo, S., Sako, M., Konaté, M., Bâ, H.O., Camara, Y., Sangaré, I., Coulibaly, S., Menta, I. and Diarra, M.B. (2021) Metabolic Syndrome: Epidemiological, Clinical and Biological Profiles in the Cardiology and Internal Medicine Departments of the Mother-Child CHU “Luxembourg”. World Journal of Cardiovascular Diseases, 11, 593-602. https://doi.org/10.4236/wjcd.2021.1112056 Received: November 5, 2021 Accepted: December 18, 2021 Published: December 21, 2021 Copyright © 2021 by author(s) and Scientific Research Publishing Inc. This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution International License (CC BY 4.0). http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Open Access


Introduction
Metabolic syndrome is a clinical entity defined by the association in the same subject of four of the following five factors: abdominal obesity (or android), type 2 diabetes, hypertension, hypo HDL cholesterolemia, hypertriglyceridemia. Heredity, a sedentary lifestyle and eating habits play a very important role in its development [1]. Metabolic syndrome significantly increases the risk of cardiovascular disease [2]. Since its initial description by REAVEN in 1988 under the term "syndrome X", the metabolic syndrome has continued to evolve and several definitions are currently proposed [2]. It is characterized by hyperinsulinism resulting from insulin resistance and a group of factors including hypertriglyceridemia, hypo HDL cholesterolemia, glucose intolerance, high blood pressure and android obesity [1]. The prevalence of metabolic syndrome is increasing rapidly in both developed and emerging countries as well as in developing countries. North American data from the latest NHANES III registry suggests that 20% -30% of adults living in the United States are affected by this syndrome [2]. The DESIR study [3] found an incidence of 16% in men and 11% in women and the MONICA study rates of 23.5% and 17.9%, respectively, in France [4]. In 2015, KABA found in the internal medicine department of Conakry University Hospital a prevalence of 23%, of which men represented 63% [5] while MEHREZ observed 6.57% with a female predominance in a Senegalese population in 2017 [6]. In Mali, in 2008 TRAORE observed a prevalence of 12.5% with a clear female predominance of 76% in the internal medicine department of CHU POINT G [7]. BERTHE observed 68% in the diabetic population of Bamako [8] in 2009. COULIBALY found 58% in a study carried out in 2015 [9]. The metabolic syndrome is a real public health problem because of its complications (cardiovascular and type 2 diabetes), the absence of data at the level of the Mother-Child University Hospital "Luxembourg" motivated us to carry out this work with the aim of studying the epidemiological, clinical-biological profiles and the related

Materials and Methods
This is a cross-sectional study, which took place from September 2019 to June 2020 in the cardiology and internal medicine department of the mother-child CHU "Luxembourg". The new definition of harmonization of the SM or IDF 2009 is based on the association in the same individual of at least 3 of the criteria mentioned in Table   1 below.

Results
During this study, we identified 104 patients according to the 2009 harmonization attempt. The female sex occupied 58.65% of cases and the male sex 41.35% with a sex ratio = 0.70.  The 60 -69 age group accounted for 40.78%. The average age was 63.00 ± 11.44 years, with extremes ranging from 30 to 98 years.      Complications were dominated by dyslipidemia with a frequency of 53.85%, followed by stroke and acute renal failure with a frequency of 23% each.

Discussion
A total of 104 patients were included, 61 women or 58.65% and 43 men or 41.35% (Figure 1), with a sex ratio of 0.70. Our result is similar to that of Raharinavalona with a female predominance of 53.88% and a sex ratio of 0.86 [10] in a type 2 diabetic population (harmonization FID 2009), the same observation was made by Laraqui with a frequency of 21.7% [11]. The average age in our series was 63.00 ± 11.44 years, with extremes ranging from 30 to 98 years. The predominant age group was that of 60 to 69 years with a frequency of 48.78% ( Figure 2). The same observation was made by BA in Senegal with an average age of 63.3 years [12], Alkassan found a lower result than ours with a frequency of 31.51% in the age group of 50 to 70 years [13]. This result is supported by numerous studies which show an increase in the prevalence of metabolic syndrome with age. Housewives were the most affected with a rate of 41.23% (Table   2). This situation is explained by the sedentary lifestyle led by women in general and in particular those who have no other activity than the household and by the lack of income to afford a healthier diet. The main antecedents found were: diabetes with 80.77%, followed by hypertension 79.81% and dyslipidemia with 53.85% (Table 3). This result is slightly higher than that of Laraqui who observed a frequency of 12.8% [11]. Tobacco is defined in numerous studies as an important risk factor in the occurrence of cardiovascular events [3]. Visual blurring was present in 23.08% of cases, followed by dyspnea on exertion with 22.12% (Table 4). These clinical signs speak in favor of complications in the eyes and heart. In our series, 34% of our patients presented moderate obesity and 31% were overweight, either a cumulative rate of 71% above normal ( Figure 3).
Laraqui observed 53.4% of overweight patients [11]. Waist circumference was high in 39.53 of the male patients with an average of 104 ± 11.04 cm against 37.70% for the female patients (average = 100 ± 15.22 cm) Figure 4. These data remain consistently high in more than half of our patients. In our study, out of 41 patients who performed an ECG. 55.77% presented a sinus rhythm, an LVH was found in 4.81% which is predictive of some complications. 68% of patients with a cardiac ultrasound had retained LVEF. Hyperglycemia was found in 51% of patients due to the fact that the majority of patients had diabetes as a history and did not follow an appropriate diet. Elevated glycated hemoglobin (HbA1C) levels were found in 29% of cases. Low HDL-c was the predominant dyslipidemia in patients of both sexes, 75% in women and 64.52% in men (Table 5).
HDL-cholesterol has a vascular protective effect against the development of atherosclerosis. The FRAMINGHAM study was one of the first prospective studies to show the inverse relationship between HDL-cholesterol and cardiovascular disease [14]. The European PROCAM study also demonstrated a very significant decrease in coronary risk as the value of HDL-cholesterol increased, with a A. Keita et al. World Journal of Cardiovascular Diseases risk 3 times higher in subjects whose HDL-cholesterol was less than 0.35 g/l than that of subjects whose level was greater than 0.35 g/l [15]. Elevated triglyceridemia levels were observed in 42.86% of women and 41.94% of men (Table 5).
Overall lipid abnormalities are observed more in women than in men, this situation could be explained by the sedentary lifestyle in women and especially by fleeing as age advances. In our series, complications were dominated by dyslipidemia with a frequency of 53.85% ( Figure 5). This could be explained by the fact that they are the starting point of cardiovascular complications. Stroke and acute renal failure followed with a frequency of 23% each ( Figure 5). Heart failure and cardiomyopathy were found in 21.15% of cases each ( Figure 5). This result proves that the metabolic syndrome constitutes a true precursor in the occurrence of cardiovascular events and emphasizes the need to implement all means to prevent these complications.
However, our study had many limitations, namely: -The small size of the sample.
-The difficulty of collecting anthropometric data in bedridden patients (unconscious and bedridden).

Conclusion
Metabolic syndrome is the combination of different metabolic and hemodynamic factors into a single entity that dramatically increases the risk of type 2 diabetes and/or cardiovascular disease. The female sex and the elderly are the most affected. Diabetes, hypertension, obesity and dyslipidemia are the most common personal histories. The metabolic syndrome remains a real public health problem, constantly increasing in our populations and constitutes a danger both in terms of its constituent elements and its complications. Its management primarily involves prevention through adopting a healthy lifestyle and treating people at high risk.