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  • Usefulness of High-Sensitiv...
    Pastormerlo, Luigi Emilio, MD; Agazio, Assunta, MSc; Benelli, Eleonora, MSc; Gabutti, Alessandra, MD; Poletti, Roberta, MD; Prontera, Concetta, MD; Clerico, Aldo, MD; Emdin, Michele, MD; Passino, Claudio, MD

    The American journal of cardiology, 08/2015, Letnik: 116, Številka: 4
    Journal Article

    Elevation of resting high-sensitivity troponin (hs-Tn) holds prognostic value in heart failure (HF), but its pathophysiological meaning is unclear. We aimed to investigate hs-Tn elevation after maximal exercise in patients with systolic HF and its neurohormonal and hemodynamic correlates: 30 patients diagnosed with systolic HF (left ventricular ejection fraction 32 ± 8%, mean ± SD), on guideline-directed medical therapy and not recognized inducible ischemia, underwent maximal cardiopulmonary stress test, with assay of plasma N -terminal proB-type natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP), norepinephrine (NE), and hs-TnT (hs-TnT) at baseline, peak, and 1 and 4 hours after exercise. Cardiac output (CO) was measured during effort, with a rebreathing technique. The natural logarithm of the ratio between percentage (%) increase in CO and NT-proBNP (lnCO%/NT-proBNP% increase) was evaluated, as a noninvasive estimate of Frank–Starling adaptation to effort, with NT-proBNP variation considered as a surrogate of end-diastolic left ventricular pressure variation. Hs-TnT increased during exercise with a 4-hour peak (p = 0.001); 10 patients had hs-TnT increase >20%. Patients with Hs-TnT increase >20% were more symptomatic at rest (p = 0.039) and showed greater NE at peak exercise (p = 0.003) and less lnCO%/NT-proBNP% increase (p = 0.034). A lower lnCO%/NT-proBNP% increase correlated with greater NE at peak exercise ( r  = −0.430, p = 0.018). In conclusion, acute troponin elevation after maximal exercise was detected in 1/3 of this series. The association of troponin release with NE, CO, and NT-proBNP changes after effort suggests a pathophysiological link among transient hemodynamic overload, adrenergic activation, and myocardial cell damage, likely identifying a clinical subset at greater risk for HF progression.