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    Acta Cardiol. 2005 Apr;60(2):165-70.

    Significance of serum troponin I elevation in patients with acute aortic dissection of the ascending aorta.

    Bonnefoy E, Godon P, Kirkorian G, Chabaud S, Touboul P.

    Service de Cardiologie et Soins Intensifs, Hôpital Cardiovasculaire et Pneumologique Louis Pradel, Lyon, France. eric.bonnefoy@chu-lyon.fr

    OBJECTIVE: This study evaluated the prevalence of increased cardiac troponin I (cTnI) in patients with acute aortic dissection of the ascending aorta (type A). METHODS AND RESULTS: In 119 consecutive patients with type A acute aortic dissection, serum cardiac troponin I was measured along with clinical, haemodynamic, electrocardiographic and echocardiographic variables obtained on admission. Cardiac troponin I was positive in 28 patients (23.5%; mean +/- SD: 6.1 +/- 14.7 ng/ml) and above the myocardial infarction threshold (1.5 ng/ml) in 12 (10%). Catecholamine infusion (17.9% vs. 4.4%; p = 0.03) and higher value of creatinine (35.7% vs. 15.4%; p = 0.03) were more frequent in patients with elevated troponin. Total mortality was 29.7% (n = 35) and surgical mortality was 16.8% (n = 17). An increased troponin was discriminatory with respect to mortality (OR: 4.1 (1.6-9.9); p = 0.002) in univariate analysis. However, this association was lost when other markers of death (age, stroke, ST-segment elevation, tamponade, catecholamine infusion, renal failure) were added in a multivariate model (OR: 2.2 (0.7-7.4); p = 0.19) indicating that the myocardial loss associated with troponin increase is not in itself a factor of mortality. CONCLUSIONS: Cardiac troponin I elevation is frequent in patients with type A aortic dissection. It might reflect a higher haemodynamic stress but does not necessarily reflect a negative prognosis.

    PMID: 15887472 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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