Troponin is a major diagnostic criterion of acute myocardial infarction (AMI) which confirms myocardial damage and necrosis. In out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) patients its dynamics and diagnostic value is often controversial and has not been well described. Most of prior studies were retrospective, using first generation troponin assays and assessing only admission troponin. The aim of this work is to correlate dynamics of sensitive troponin I with urgent coronary angiography. Patients resuscitated after OHCA will be prospectively divided in three groups based on the results of their urgent angiographies. Serial assessment of sensitive troponin I will be obtained over initial 48 hours. We expect admission troponin will not be predictive of AMI. Over next hours troponin levels will be highest in patients with acute coronary lesion, lower in stable obstructive coronary disease and insignificant in non-obstructive coronary disease. We also expect significant difference in highest values and dynamics of troponin in sub-group with spontaneous reperfusion (TIMI flow 2 and 3) comparing to patients with coronary occlusion (TIMI flow 0 and 1). In patients with non-obstructive disease we expect troponin levels to correlate with duration of cardiac arrest, number of external electric shocks and cumulative dose of adrenaline administered.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
159
Eight blood samples in each patient within 48 hours to perform Troponin I measurement.
University Medical Centre Ljubljana
Ljubljana, Slovenia
Peak Troponin I value
Peak troponin I values will be compared among 3 groups with different coronary anatomy
Time frame: Within 48 hours after hospital admission
Admission troponin I value
Admission troponin I will be compared among 3 groups with different coronary anatomy
Time frame: Within 3 hours of cardiac arrest
Peak troponin I value in acute coronary syndrome group
Peak troponin I values will be compared among group with coronary artery occlusion and group with spontaneous reperfusion
Time frame: Within 48 hours after hospital admission
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