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Clinical Chemistry, Vol 26, 511-512, Copyright © 1980 by American Association for Clinical Chemistry
ZD Goodman and SR Hamilton
The activity of creatine kinase isoenzyme BB (CK-BB) in serum is rarely abnormally high (i.e., detectable). An increase in immunoreactive CK-BB or CK-BB activity in patients with prostatic disease has been proposed as an indication of prostatic adenocarcinoma. Here we report the case of an elderly man with massive benign prostatic hyperplasia but no clinical or pathological evidence of prostatic adenocarcinoma, whose serum CK-BB activity was found by agarose gel electrophoresis to be 1 U/L (normal: 0%), 10% of his total CK activity. Serum CK-BB activity was further increased to 16 U/L (20% of total CK activity) 1 h after prostatectomy, but became undetectable by the second day after the operation. The findings suggest that: (a) the source of the serum CK-BB activity was the enlarged prostate gland; (b) abnormally high CK-BB activity in serum of men with prostatic disease does not necessarily indicate the presence of prostatic adenocarcinoma; and (c) myocardial injury could be erroneously diagnosed postoperatively in prostatectomy patients if CK isoenzyme methods are used that do not consistently separate "heart-specific" CK-MB from CK-BB.
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