• Clin. Chim. Acta · Feb 1996

    Cardiac troponin I in the diagnosis of myocardial injury and infarction.

    • J Mair, N Genser, D Morandell, J Maier, P Mair, P Lechleitner, C Calzolari, C Larue, E Ambach, F Dienstl, B Pau, and B Puschendorf.
    • Department of Medical Chemistry, University of Innsbruck Medical School, Austria.
    • Clin. Chim. Acta. 1996 Feb 9; 245 (1): 19-38.

    AbstractWe used a cardiospecific enzymoimmunometric assay to measure cardiac troponin I (cTnI) in samples serially drawn from 78 patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI), 7 patients with unstable angina (Braunwald class III), 22 multi-traumatized patients, and in 30 athletes after eccentric exercise, as well as in 101 non-traumatic chest pain patients on admission to the emergency department. cTnI assay crossreactivity with crude human skeletal muscle homogenates was < 0.1%. cTnI could not be detected in athletes or multi-traumatized patients except for 2 trauma patients with myocardial damage. Increased cTnI concentrations were found in 6 of 7 patients with unstable angina at rest and in all AMI patients. After AMI, cTnI increased about 3.5 h (median) after the onset of chest pain, reached peak values parallel to CKMB, and stayed increased for at least 4 days. Cardiac troponin T (cTnT) increased and mostly peaked parallel to cTnI. cTnT sensitivity on the 7th day after AMI was significantly higher than that of cTnI. In contrast to cTnI, cTnT mostly showed a second, usually smaller, peak about day 4 after AMI. During the first 4 h after the onset of chest pain and before thrombolytic therapy the sensitivities of myoglobin (0.43) and CKMB mass (0.56) were significantly higher than those of both troponins (cTnI, 0.29; cTnT, 0.25). Areas under receiver operator characteristic curves indicated only moderate diagnostic accuracies of bio-chemical markers for early AMI diagnosis in non-traumatic chest pain patients that cTnI is a highly sensitive and specific marker for myocardial damage which is suitable for early and late diagnosis.

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