Creatine kinase-MB elevation after stroke is not cardiac in origin: comparison with troponin T levels
- PMID: 11779925
- DOI: 10.1161/hs0102.101544
Creatine kinase-MB elevation after stroke is not cardiac in origin: comparison with troponin T levels
Abstract
Background and purpose: Creatine kinase-MB (CK-MB) increases in some patients with stroke, with no clear evidence of an acute coronary syndrome. Its elevations have been suggested to represent a biological marker for stroke-related myocardial injury. Troponin T has superior sensitivity and specificity to CK-MB in revealing minor myocardial injury. Therefore, we studied troponin T levels after stroke to determine whether troponin T increases in parallel to CK-MB.
Methods: We made daily measurements of CK-MB, myoglobin, total creatine kinase (total CK), and troponin T levels up to day 5 in 32 patients with large hemispheric infarction and with no history of coronary heart disease. The daily enzyme levels were compared with those of a control group of 22 patients with neurological diseases other than stroke.
Results: Serum CK-MB, myoglobin, and total CK levels were elevated above the cutoff value in 11, 26, and 20 patients with stroke, respectively. These enzyme levels gradually increased within the first 3 days and declined afterward. Troponin T did not exceed the reference range in any patients. One patient had elevated myoglobin and 3 had elevated total CK in the control group. The difference between groups was significant for CK-MB, myoglobin, and total CK at various time points.
Conclusions: Troponin T, a more specific biochemical marker of myocardial injury, does not increase after stroke. Normal troponin T along with elevated CK-MB signifies that CK-MB is not the biological marker for myocytolysis. CK-MB elevations in stroke patients are likely to be noncardiac in origin.
Comment in
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Cardiac enzyme elevations after stroke: the importance of specificity.Stroke. 2002 Aug;33(8):1944-5; author reply 1944-5. doi: 10.1161/01.str.0000023346.80463.a4. Stroke. 2002. PMID: 12154239 No abstract available.
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