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Clinical Chemistry 31: 1393-1396, 1985;
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Clinical Chemistry, Vol 31, 1393-1396, Copyright © 1985 by American Association for Clinical Chemistry

Macro creatine kinase type 1 with electrophoretic mobility identical to that of the MB isoenzyme

LJ Medeiros, FA Greco, D Walsh and B Gerson

We describe the case of an elderly woman whose symptoms and electrocardiographic pattern initially suggested acute myocardial infarction. The value for total serum creatine kinase (EC 2.7.3.2; CK) was 737 U/L (reference interval: 22-269 U/L), and electrophoresis for CK isoenzymes demonstrated two bands, the more anodal migrating to the CK-MB region and the second migrating between the CK-MB and CK-MM regions. The above-normal total CK and electrophoretic pattern persisted during her 11-day hospital course. The QuiCK-MB (International Immunoassay Labs.) and Tandem-E CK-MB (Hybritech) immunoassays, however, showed CK-MB mass measurements within the normal range. In further investigation with a mixture of patient's serum and human-serum-based control containing all CK isoenzymes, the electrophoretic mobility of only CK-BB was altered, proving that the patient had antibody to the B unit of CK in her serum. Immunofixation revealed the more anodal band to be a CK-IgA lambda complex, and the more cathodal band, a CK-IgG kappa complex. Mixing the patient's serum with polyclonal antibody specific for CK-B slowed the electrophoretic mobility of only the more anodal band. Polyclonal antibody specific for CK-M had no effect on either band. Evidently, this patient had two different types of macro CK type 1, both containing CK-BB. We conclude that macro CK type 1 can mimic CK-MB and be a source of confusion.





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