1. Screening for Coronary Artery Disease in Asymptomatic Pilots with Diabetes Mellitus.
- Author
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Zerrik, Meryem, Moumen, Amal, El Ghazi, Mouna, Smiress, Fahd Bennani, Iloughmane, Zakaria, El M’hadi, Choukri, and Chemsi, Mohamed
- Subjects
CORONARY artery disease ,MEDICAL screening ,DIABETES ,CORONARY disease ,DELAYED diagnosis - Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Coronary artery disease (CAD) is a cause of death in 75% of patients with diabetes. Its often asymptomatic nature delays diagnosis. In aeronautics, it can cause in-flight incapacitation, beyond which it represents a major fear for the medical expert. Screening for CAD is still a topical subject with the advent of new cardiovascular (CV) risk biomarkers and more effective screening tests. We report the experience of the Aeromedical Expertise Center of Rabat in this screening of diabetic pilots, with a recommendations review. METHODS: A prospective study over 1yr included diabetic pilots who benefited from systematic screening for CAD after a CV risk stratification. Coronary angiography is performed if a screening test is positive. Subsequent follow-up is carried out in consultation with the attending physician with regular evaluation in our center. RESULTS: There were 38 pilots included in our study. The average age was 55 ± 4.19yr and about 73% had a high CV risk. CAD was detected in 4 cases (10.52%) who had abnormal resting electrocardiograms and required revascularization with the placement of active stents. Approximately 75% of pilots with CAD returned to fly through a waiver with restrictions. DISCUSSION: Screening for coronary disease in diabetics is controversial, and current recommendations are not unanimous. In our study, the screening did not identify coronary diabetic pilots who could benefit from bypass surgery. Nevertheless, coronary disease was diagnosed, justifying grounding to preserve flight safety, which is an absolute priority in aviation medicine. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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