The American journal of cardiology
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Thresholds for the electrocardiographic change range of biochemical markers of acute myocardial infarction (GUSTO-IIa data).
The definition of acute myocardial infarction (AMI) is increasingly dependent on levels of biochemical markers, including troponin. We aimed to determine the levels of biochemical markers associated with definite evolutionary electrocardiographic (ECG) changes in patients with ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction. By examining the database of 855 patients from the troponin substudy of GUSTO-IIa, we selected patients with ST-segment elevation at baseline, evidence of evolution of the QRS, T, and ST-segment waveforms on the predischarge electrocardiogram, and 3 measurements of > or =1 of the following: creatine kinase (CK)-MB, troponin T, or troponin I. ⋯ For patients with troponin T measurements, the fifth percentile as a multiple of the upper limit of normal was 11.0 (upper limit of normal 0.1 ng/ml). For patients with troponin I measurements, the fifth percentile as a multiple of the upper limit of normal was 3.8 (upper limit of normal 1.5 ng/ml). This study revealed that 95% of the patients with definite ECG evidence of AMI had a more than twofold increase in CK-MB and more than a 3- to 11-fold increase in troponin.
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The risk of cardiac events in patients undergoing major noncardiac surgery is dependent on their clinical characteristics and the results of stress testing. The purpose of this study was to develop a composite approach to defining levels of risk and to examine whether different approaches to prophylaxis influenced this prediction of outcome. One hundred forty-five consecutive patients (aged 68 +/- 9 years, 79 men) with >1 clinical risk variable were studied with standard dobutamine-atropine stress echo before major noncardiac surgery. ⋯ Preoperative myocardial revascularization was performed in only 3 patients, none of whom had events. Perioperative and long-term events occurred despite the use of beta blockers; 7 of 41 beta blocker-treated patients had a perioperative event (17%, 95% CI 7% to 32%); these treated patients were at higher anticipated risk than untreated patients (20 +/- 24% vs 10 +/- 19%, p = 0.02). The total event rate over late follow-up was 13%, and was predicted by dobutamine-atropine stress echo results and heart rate response.
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Biography Historical Article
Dean Ornish, MD: a conversation with the editor. Interview by William Clifford Roberts, MD.