Abstract

One of the most common reasons for pediatric cardiology referrals is chest pain in childhood. Although it is mostly innocent in character, it is rarely associated with life-threatening pathologies. In this study, it was aimed to evaluate the etiological causes in children with chest pain. Our study included 1000 children who were referred to the pediatric cardiology clinic with the complaint of chest pain between January 2019 and June 2022. Demographic characteristics, accompanying complaints, echocardiographies, electrocardiographies, 24-h rhythm holters, treadmill exercise test, computed tomography angiography, and non-cardiac findings related to etiology were analyzed retrospectively from the file archives of the patients. Five hundred and nine (50.9%) of the patients were female and 491 (49.1%) were male. The mean age of the patients was 11.3 y (range: 3-18 years). Cardiological pathology associated with chest pain was detected in only 6.8% of the patients. Among the etiologies of chest pain, mitral valve prolapse (MVP) was the most common cardiological pathology with a rate of 2.1%. In the non-cardiac etiological evaluation of chest pain, idiopathic causes with a frequency of 48%, musculoskeletal pathologies with a frequency of 22.6%, respiratory pathologies with a frequency of 7.9%, psychiatric pathologies with a frequency of 7.3%, gastrointestinal pathologies with a frequency of 4.1%, and familial Mediterranean fever with a frequency of 2.4%, miscellaneous with a frequency of 1.1% were found, respectively. In the study, it was determined that non-cardiac causes were more common among the etiological causes of chest pain in the pediatric age group. In addition, MVP was the most common cause of cardiac chest pain.

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