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Clinical Chemistry, Vol 25, 93-98, Copyright © 1979 by American Association for Clinical Chemistry
CR Roe, GS Wagner, WG Young Jr, SE Curtis, FR Cobb and RG Irvin
We compared (a) the frequency of detection of isoenzyme MB of creatine kinase (CK; EC 2.7.3.2) in serum of patients undergoing coronary-artery bypass surgery, (b) the interval during uhich its activity was supranormal in serum, and (c) an index of the amount of CK released into blood ("CK-MB area") with postoperative electrocardiographic changes in 80 patients. The frequency of detection of CK-MB is a function of frequency of sampling during the early postoperative period. Because the duration of appearance and the calculated CK-MB area increased as the electrocardiogram became more specific for infarction (p less than 0.01), a twice-daily sampling schedule proved clinically relevant. Only 5.4% of patients had electrocardiographic evidence of infarction when CK-MB was absent by the second postoperative morning. When CK-MB was still detected at that time, 69.6% of patients had persistent new Q waves, consistent with infarction. In three patients who died postoperatively, significant myocardial necrosis was demonstrated. All three had had persistently increased values for CK-MB, related to electrocardiographic changes of infarction in one patient and ischemic changes in two. Evidently CK-MB is a more sensitive indicator of myocardial necrosis than the electrocardiogram and CK-MB area should be a useful criterion in evaluating methods of intra-operative myocardial protection.
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