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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 98, 397-401, Copyright © 1989 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
JR Seguin, M Saussine, M Ferriere, JJ Leger, J Leger, C Larue, C Calzolari, R Grolleau and PA Chaptal
Plasma levels of ventricular myosin fragments, determined with monoclonal
antibodies to myosin heavy chains, were studied in 27 patients after
cardiac operations (17 aorta-coronary bypass grafts and 10 valve
replacements) to assess their possible role as a marker of perioperative
myocardial necrosis. Five patients had perioperative myocardial necrosis
after aorta-coronary bypass grafts as indicated by changes in the
electrocardiogram and elevated levels of the MB isoenzyme of creatine
kinase. Six more patients were also studied after thoracic operations
performed by the same sternotomy approach. After cardiac operations, myosin
levels increased from postoperative day 3 and reached peak values on day 7.
Peak myosin values in patients with perioperative myocardial necrosis after
aorta-coronary bypass grafting were significantly higher than in patients
after an identical operation but without perioperative myocardial
infarction (3793 +/- 592 versus 369 +/- 47 ng/ml; p less than 0.001). These
results suggest that plasma myosin is a sensitive marker of myocardial
necrosis. Furthermore, peak plasma levels of ventricular myosin after
coronary bypass grafting without myocardial infarction (mean value 369 +/-
47 ng/ml) were not significantly different from peak levels after thoracic
operations (mean value 253 +/- 52 ng/ml), whereas they were significantly
higher after valve replacement (mean value 794 +/- 149 ng/ml; p less than
0.01). These results indicate that a certain degree of myocardial necrosis
occurs during value replacement that is undetectable by the usual
diagnostic criteria for perioperative myocardial infarction. We conclude
that the plasma level of ventricular myosin fragments is a more specific
and accurate marker of perioperative myocardial necrosis than changes in
the electrocardiogram or elevated creatine kinase MB levels. Therefore the
detection of myosin fragments, which appear in the serum on the third day
after cardiac operations, may be useful for precise comparisons of
different techniques of myocardial protection.
ARTICLES
Myosin: a highly sensitive indicator of myocardial necrosis after cardiac operations
Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, C.H.U. Hopital Saint Eloi, Montpellier, France.
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