Cardiac-specific troponin-l radioimmunoassay in the diagnosis of acute myocardial infarction☆

1987 
Abstract The cardiac isotype of the myofibrillar contractile protein, troponin-I, is located specifically in the mammalian heart. A sensitive radioimmunoassay has been developed to detect human and nonhuman primate cardiac troponin-I in serum down to 10 ng/ml. Immunochemical cross reactivity with skeletal troponin-I was only 2% and was species nonspecific. Normal patient levels of cardiac troponin-I are about 10 ng/ml. In patients with acute myocardial infarction (n = 32), serum cardiac troponin-I was elevated within 4 to 6 hours, reached a mean peak level of 112 ng/ml (range 20 to 550 ng/ml) at 18 hours, and remained above normal for up to 6 to 8 days following infarction. Peak cardiac troponin-I correlated with peak creatine kinase (CK) MB isoenzyme ( r = 0.75). In subjects (n = 34) with skeletal muscle damage (total CK = 338 to 5384 IU/L), cardiac troponin-I levels were not elevated above normal, although CK-MB isoenzyme was elevated in some patients. Cardiac troponin-I levels were normal or slightly elevated in patients with ischemic heart disease and were normal in patients with chest pain of noncardiac origin. Immunoassay of cardiac troponin-I could be a valuable diagnostic aid in the cardiac-specific detection of cell necrosis.
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