Laboratory Diagnosis of Patients with Acute Chest Pain
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Ilkka Penttilä
, Karri Penttilä and Tapio Rantanen
Abstract
The enzyme activities of creatine kinase (CK), its isoenzyme MB (CK-MB) and of lactate dehydrogenase isoenzyme 1 (LD-1) have been used for years in diagnosing patients with chest pain in order to differentiate patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI) from non-AMI patients. These methods are easy to perform as automated analyses, but they are not specific for cardiac muscle damage. During the early 90's the situation changed. First creatine kinase MB mass (CK-MB mass) replaced the measurement of CK-MB activity. Subsequently cardiac-specific proteins troponin T (cTnT) and troponin I (cTnI) appeared on the scene, displacing LD-1 analysis. However, troponin concentrations in blood increase only from four to six hours after onset of chest pain. Therefore a rapid marker such as myoglobin, fatty acid binding protein or glycogen phosphorylase BB could be used in early diagnosis of AMI. On the other hand, CK-MB isoforms alone may also be useful in rapid diagnosis of cardiac muscle damage. Myoglobin, CK-MB mass, cTnT and cTnI are nowadays widely used in diagnosing patients with acute chest pain. Myoglobin is not cardiac-specific and therefore requires supplementation with some other analyses such as troponins to support the myoglobin value. Troponins are very highly cardiac-specific. Only the sera of some patients with severe renal failure, which requires hemodialysis, have elevated cTnT and /or cTnI without there being any evidence of cardiac damage. On the other hand, the latest studies have shown that elevated troponin levels in sera of hemodialysis patients point to an increased risk of future cardiac events in a similar manner to the elevated troponin values in sera of patients with unstable angina pectoris. In addition, the bedside tests for cTnT and cTnI alone or together with myoglobin and CK-MB mass can be used instead of quantitative analyses in the diagnosis of patients with chest pain. These rapid tests are easy to perform and they do not require expensive instrumentation. For routine clinical laboratory practice we suggest that in diagnosis of patients with chest pain, myoglobin and CK-MB mass measurements should be performed whenever they are requested (24 h/day) and cTnT or cTnI on admission to the hospital and then 4–6 and 12 hours later.
Copyright (c)2000 by Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG
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Articles in the same Issue
- Laboratory Diagnosis of Patients with Acute Chest Pain
- Methods for the Determination of Plasma Total Homocysteine: a Review
- Serum Protein 90K/Mac-2BP Is an Independent Predictor of Disease Severity during Hepatitis C Virus Infection
- Interferon β1a Therapy Changes Lipoprotein Metabolism in Patients with Multiple Sclerosis
- On-Line Analysis of Electrolytes in Extracorporeally Circulating Blood: Application of a Rat Model to Examine the Effect of a Single Pharma-cological Dose of Melatonin on Electrolyte Levels in Blood
- Biochemical and Hematological Changes in Low-Level Aluminum Intoxication
- On Accuracy and Precision of a HPLC Method for Measurement of Urine Porphyrin Concentrations
- Human Heart-Type Cytoplasmic Fatty Acid-Binding Protein (H-FABP) for the Diagnosis of Acute Myocardial Infarction. Clinical Evaluation of H-FABP in Comparison with Myoglobin and Creatine Kinase Isoenzyme MB
- Quality Control of Coated Antibodies: New, Rapid Determination of Binding Affinity
- Determination of Reticulocytes: Three Methods Compared
- A New Modular Chemiluminescence Immunoassay Analyser Evaluated
- Point-of-Care Testing
- Pre-Analytical Variation of Laboratory Variables
- Capillary Electrophoresis: Theory and Practice. P. Camilleri, editor
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