Enzyme release after elective cardioversion
1990
Electrical cardioversion is reported to be associated with some degree of skeletal muscle and myocardial damage. In the present study, total creatine kinase (S-CK) and the activity of the subunit S-CK-B activity have been measured in serum after elective cardioversion in 30 patients. The enzyme activity peaked during a 28-h observation period. S-CK increased from 72±6 (mean±SEM) U l−1 (1.2± 0.1 ukat l−1) to a maximal value of 990 ± 258 u l−1 (16.5 ± 4.3 ukat l−1) and S-CK-B (analysed as a measure of S-CK-MB) increased from 3.0±0.6 U l−1 (0.05 ±0.01 ukat l−1) to a maximum of 10.2 ±1.8 U l−1 (0.17 ± 0.03 ukat l−1), with seven patients reaching a S-CK-B value above the discrimination limit for myocardial infarction. The relationship between S-CK and S-CK-B values, however, indicated a skeletal muscle origin of the enzyme release. The maximal activity of both S-CK (r = 0.79; P<0.001) and S-CK-B (r = 0.70; P<0.001) correlated positively to the cumulative delivered energy.
Thus, the release of S-CK and S-CK-B after elective cardioversion is correlated to the cumulative energy delivered, indicating increased skeletal muscle damage with greater energy. If the S-CK activity curve is interpreted without access to the S-CK-B activity this might interfere with the diagnosis of myocardial infarction.
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