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What does an indeterminate troponin really mean?... other than another 3am rule out ACS admit. Jamie Navel, MD September 30 th , 2009 Noon Conference Contra Costa Regional Medical Center. Goals. Discuss the definition of a troponin leak Discuss diagnosis of AMI
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What does an indeterminate troponin really mean?...other than another 3am rule out ACS admit Jamie Navel, MD September 30th, 2009 Noon Conference Contra Costa Regional Medical Center
Goals • Discuss the definition of a troponin leak • Discuss diagnosis of AMI • Discuss new classifications of AMI • Discuss in detail mechanisms of Type 2 AMI and indeterminate troponins • Clinical significance of elevated troponins
Introduction • Troponins are a commonly ordered test in the Emergency room • The appropriate interpretation of a positive or negative troponin is important in determining correct course of intervention (namely Percutaneous Coronary Intervention/anti-thrombotics) • Clinical correlation is still very important in determining cause of an elevated troponin
What are troponins? • Regulatory proteins that control the calcium-mediated interaction of actin and myosin • 3 sub-units Troponin T, Troponin I and Troponin C • Found in all muscle but our assays test for the cardiac specific troponins of I and T • Troponin C not clinically significant
Troponin I Range • Troponin T was the first troponin used but now Troponin I is considered superior and the newer assays are very sensitive (can detect <1g myocardial necrosis) • <0.05 is normal (At CCRMC our cutoff is <0.07)* >99% of controls • >0.05 - <0.5 is indeterminate • 0.5 or greater considered suggestive of acute myocardial ischemia
Troponin costs • Single test $78 • CARP (not just cool fish) ~$200 • Number of rule out ACS admits because of indeterminate troponins-priceless
Significance of a “positive troponin” • There are clear standards for the interpretation of positive (>0.5) in setting of high suspicion of coronary artery disease. This leads to a protocalized approach with the common goal being early revascularization On the other hand there’s the gray area… • Troponin leak-a common term often synonymous with indeterminate troponin, or positive troponin secondary to a non coronary artery pathology cause.
Troponin leak • Not a standardized term • Typically denotes a non coronary artery disease pathology that does not require cardiac cath or anti-thrombotic agents • Sounds gentler and is often explained away but does have prognostic importance • Treatment strategies are varied based on the underlying pathology and goals of care
Indeterminate Troponin • 0.05 (0.07)-0.49 • Has outpatient clinical significance in providing marker of increased mortality • Does not rule out concurrent CAD but clinical suspicion and risk factors are very important in guiding initial management • Cause should be indentified and treatment based on treating underlying pathology
The diagnosis of Acute Myocardial Infarction • The reason we initially order a troponin • Myocardial Infarction is cell death secondary to ischemia- evidenced by coagulation necrosis or contraction band necrosis under a microscope (Interestingly normal apoptosis does not cause measurable troponin levels)
Three Pathologic Phases of AMI • Acute MI-First 6 hours coagulation necrosis. After 6 hours there is PMN invasion • Healing MI-can take up to 5-6 weeks with mononuclear and fibroblast invasion • Healed MI-scar tissue with no cellular infiltration
Clinical Classification of AMI • Type 1-spontaneous AMI secondary to primary coronary event • Type 2-MI secondary to ischemia from increased oxygen demand or decreased supply
Clinical Classification of AMI cont. • Type 3- sudden cardiac death with evidence of ischemia but no biomarkers • Type 4a- PCI • Type 4b- Stent thrombosis • Type 5- CABG
Diagnosis of AMI • High clinical suspicion • EKG changes • Elevated biomarkers (troponin >0.5)
Symptoms of Acute MI • 25% have no symptoms • Classic crescendo crushing chest pain • Discomfort in upper back, neck, jaw, teeth • Diaphoresis, SOB, nausea, vomiting or syncope
Signs of AMI • Pale and diaphoretic • Cool extremities • Soft heart sounds • S3 or S4 • Tachy or bradycardia • Hyper and hypotension
EKG findings • STEMI-new ST elevation at the J point in two contiguous leads >0.1mV in two contiguous anatomic leads New LBBB *inferior leads >0.05 acceptable if high suspicion • NSTEMI-new horizontal or down-sloping ST depression 0.05mV in two contiguous leads and/or T wave inversion >0.1mV in two contiguous leads with prominent R wave
EKG limitations/pitfalls • Meaning of Q waves (acute or prior MI) • Posterior MI look for ST↓ V1-V2 and ST↑ lateral leads • Right Ventricular Infarction V4R ST ↑, ST↑ in lateral leads • J point elevation
Echocardiography • Outcome data still being studied • Very helpful in early MI when troponins aren’t elevated yet • Large wall motion abnormality helps guide decision for immediate cardiac cath • Not always immediately available and requires further training of personnel
Use of troponins in initial evaluation of AMI • When the pretest probability of Acute Myocardial infarction secondary to coronary artery occlusion (Type 1) is high a positive troponin is very helpful and part of the diagnostic criteria • When pretest probability is low this can lead to unnecessary cardiac evaluation including cardiac cath (i.e. Type 2 AMI)
Nonthrombus Ischemia/Type 2 AMI Increased Myocardial Oxygen Demand Tachycardia Changes in cardiac loading conditions Increased cardiac output Myocardial depression Decreased Oxygen Supply Reduced coronary perfusion Decreased systemic oxygenation
CAD in setting of Type 2 AMI • Type 2 AMI can be caused by increased demand in the setting of stable coronary artery disease (won’t necessarily be immediately improved by PCI/anticoagulation) • Often cause of Type 2 AMI might be contraindication to PCI or anti-coagulation but worth discussing risks/benefits
Does negative cardiac cath rule out coronary artery disease? • New studies showing evidence of AMI on cardiac MRI despite negative cardiac cath • Cardiac Syndrome X-patients with symptoms of angina but normal coronary arteries • Microvascular occlusion can cause angina, EKG changes and cell death with normal coronary arteries
Cardiac Syndrome X • Endothelial Cell Dysfunction-reduced vasodilator or enhanced vasoconstrictor response to medications or exercise • Autonomic Dysfunction-increased sympathetic tone • Occult coronary artery disease-diagnosed by intravascular ultrasound • Enhanced pain sensitivity
What causes troponin release? • Cell death- When myocytes are irreversibly damaged the cell membrane degrades releases the contents. Some believe this is always the cause regardless of evidence of coronary artery disease • Increased membrane permeability coupled with myocardial depressive factors-Degradation to smaller fragments that “leak” out-not completely understood
Non-thrombotic causes of elevated troponins Demand Ischemia • Tachy or bradyarrhythmias • Critically ill patients • Hypotension • Hypovolemia • LVH • HCM • Burns (>25%) Nonthrombotic Myocardial Ischemia • Coronary vasospasm • Acute Stroke • Ingestion of Sympathomimetics • Aortic dissection • Aortic valve disease • Apical ballooningsyndrome Myocardial Strain • CHF • Pulmonary embolism • Extreme exertion • Aortic valve disease Direct Myocardial Damage • Infiltrative diseases • Inflammatory diseases including myocarditis • Drug toxicity • Rhabdomyolysis • Cardiac Trauma including surgery • Defibrillation Multi-factorial • Renal disease
Troponins in CKD • Troponin I is still the most helpful in distinguishing AMI • Troponin T is more often elevated in asymptomatic patients • Elevated troponin associated with poorer prognosis at same GFR
Diagnosis of AMI in CKD • Difficult because many ESRD/CKD patients have co-morbid CAD • Troponin I more specific as both myoglobin and CK-MB can be falsely elevated with elevated GFR • Many dialysis patients have elevated CK but generally less than 3x normal • Trend is very important in CKD patients for determining presence of new ischemia
Mechanism of Elevated Troponin in CKD • LVH • Endothelial dysfunction • Loss of membrane integrity • Impaired renal excretion • Stretch mediated troponin release
Left Ventricular Hypertrophy • Degree of troponin elevation increases as degree of LVH increases. • Occult subendocardial ischemia from increased oxygen demand from increased muscle mass • Decreased flow reserve due remodeled coronary microcirculation
Heart Failure • Troponin release via strain and cell death • Close correlation between BNP and troponin • Wall stress leads to subendocardial ischemia • Cell death secondary to RAS, sympathetic stimulation, inflammatory mediators • Elevations associated with advanced heart failure
Pulmonary Embolism • Secondary to acute right heart strain • Usually resolves in 40 hours (more quickly then with ischemic heart disease)
Pulmonary Hypertension • Tachycardia • Lower mixed venous oxygen saturation • Higher BNP elevation • Independently COPD exacerbations with elevated troponins have higher in hospital mortality
Sepsis • Myocardial depression secondary to circulating factors (TNF-a, IL-6, CRP) • Hypoperfusion • LV dysfunction generally reversible and can be exacerbated by norepinephrine
Burns • Related to extent of burns rather than age or co-existing conditions • Generally seen when greater than 25-30% surface area is affected
Stroke • Imbalance of autonomic nervous system • Increased sympathetic activity and cathecholamine release • Difficult to interpret secondary to high degree of co-existing CAD
Stress induced cardiomyopathy • Otherwise known as Takotsobu’s or Broken Heart Syndrome • Classic apical ballooning seen on Echo • Increased levels of circulating catecholamines
Direct myocardial Damage • Cardiac contusion • ICD shock • Infiltrative disorders (amyloidosis via compression of myocytes) • High dose chemo • Myocarditis or Myopericarditis • Immune response after cardiac transplantation
Conclusion • The cause of a positive troponin must be immediately classified for appropriate intervention • An indeterminate troponin is not normal • There are many causes of an indeterminate troponin. • Still give an ASA if any suspicion • Regardless of the cause of elevation there is increased mortality/poor prognosis
Resources Chaudhary, Imran. ”Cardiac Syndrome X”. UTDOL updated 10/16/08 Gibson MD MS, C Michael. “Serum Cardiac Enzymes in patients with Renal Failure” UTDOL updated 6/13/08 Henrich MD MACP, William L. “Serum cardiac enzymes in patients with renal failure” UTDOL updated 6/19/09 Jaffe MD, Allan S. “Troponins and creatinine kinase as biomarkers of cardiac injury” UTDOL updated 6/19/09 Jeremias MD, Allen. “Narrative review:Alternative cause for elevated cardiac troponin levels when Acute Coronary Syndrome are excluded. Annals of Internal Medicine. Vol 142. No 9. Pg786-791 Senter MD MS, Shaun. “A new, precise definition of acute myocardial infarction” Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine. Volume 76. Number 3. March 2009. pg 159-166