Title of article :
Creatine kinase-MB elevation after coronary intervention correlates with diffuse atherosclerosis, and low-to-medium level elevation has benign clinical course: Implications for early discharge after coronary intervention
Author/Authors :
Annapoorn Kini، نويسنده , , Jonathan D. Marmur، نويسنده , , Subhash Kini، نويسنده , , George Dangas، نويسنده , , Thomas P. Cocke، نويسنده , , Sylvan Wallenstein، نويسنده , , Eppie Brown، نويسنده , , John A. Ambrose، نويسنده , , Samin K. Sharma، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1999
Abstract :
OBJECTIVES
The study evaluated the incidence and predictors of creatine kinase–MB isoenzyme (CK-MB) elevation after successful coronary intervention using current devices, and assessed the influence on in-hospital course and midterm survival.
BACKGROUND
The CK-MB elevation after coronary intervention predominantly using balloon angioplasty correlates with late cardiac events of myocardial infarction (MI) and death. Whether CK-MB elevation after nonballoon devices is associated with an adverse short and midterm prognosis is unknown.
METHODS
The incidence and predictors of CK-MB elevation after coronary intervention were prospectively studied in 1,675 consecutive patients and were followed for in-hospital events and survival.
RESULTS
CK-MB elevation was detected in 313 patients (18.7%), with 1–3× in 12.8%, 3–5× in 3.5% and >5× normal in 2.4% of patients. Procedural complications or electrocardiogram changes occurred in only 49% of the CK-MB-elevation cases; CK-MB elevation was more common after nonballoon devices (19.5% vs. 11.5% after percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty; p < 0.01). Predictors of CK-MB elevation on multivariate analysis were diffuse coronary disease (p = 0.02), systemic atherosclerosis (p = 0.002), stent use (p = 0.04) and absence of beta-blocker therapy (p = 0.001). Adverse in-hospital cardiac events were more frequent in patients with >5× CK-MB elevation, with no significant difference between 1–5× CK-MB elevation versus normal CK-MB group. During mean follow-up of 13 ± 3 months, the incidence of death in the CK-MB-elevation group was 1.6% versus 1.3% in the normal CK-MB group (p = NS).
CONCLUSIONS
The CK-MB elevation after coronary intervention was observed even in the absence of discernible procedural complications and was more common in patients with diffuse atherosclerosis. In-hospital clinical events requiring prolonged monitoring were higher in >5× CK-MB-elevation patients only. Midterm survival of CK-MB-elevation patients was similar to those with normal CK-MB. Our prospective analysis shows lack of adverse in-hospital cardiac events and suggests that early discharge of stable 1–5× normal CK-MB-elevation patients after successful coronary intervention is safe.
Keywords :
myocardial infarction , RCA , CK-MB , TLR , LAD , ccs , MI , PTCA , ECG , Electrocardiogram , Congestive heart failure , CABG , SVG , CHF , Right coronary artery , percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty , LVEF , left ventricular ejection fraction , saphenous vein graft , TIMI , Thrombolysis In Myocardial Infarction , ACC/AHA , American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association , coronary artery bypass grafting , left anterior descending artery , target lesion revascularization , intra-aortic balloon pump , Canadian Cardiovascular Society , creatine kinase–MB isoenzyme , IAMP , PRCA , percutaneous rotational coronary atherectomy
Journal title :
JACC (Journal of the American College of Cardiology)
Journal title :
JACC (Journal of the American College of Cardiology)