Circadian rhythm of cardiac troponin I and its clinical impact on the diagnostic accuracy for acute myocardial infarction

  • Wildi, K.
  • Singeisen, H.
  • Twerenbold, R.
  • Badertscher, P.
  • Wussler, D.
  • Klinkenberg, L. J. J.
  • Meex, S. J. R.
  • Nestelberger, T.
  • Boeddinghaus, J.
  • Miro, O.
  • Martin-Sanchez, F. J.
  • Morawiec, B.
  • Muzyk, P.
  • Parenica, J.
  • Keller, D. I.
  • Geigy, N.
  • Potlukova, E.
  • Sabti, Z.
  • Kozhuharov, N.
  • Puelacher, C.
  • de Lavallaz, J. du Fay
  • Gimenez, M. Rubini
  • Shrestha, S.
  • Marzano, G.
  • Rentsch, K.
  • Osswald, S.
  • Reichlin, T.
  • Mueller, C.
Publication date
November 2018

Abstract

Background: High-sensitivity cardiac troponin T (hs-cTnT) blood concentrationswere shown to exhibit a diurnal rhythm, characterized by gradually decreasing concentrations throughout daytime, rising concentrations during nighttime and peak concentrations in the morning. We aimed to investigate whether this also applies to (h)s-cTnI assays and whether it would affect diagnostic accuracy for acute myocardial infarction (AMI). Methods: Blood concentrations of cTnI were measured at presentation and after 1 h using four different cTnI assays: three commonly used sensitive (s-cTnI Architect, Ultra and Accu) and one experimental high-sensitivity assay (hs-cTnI Accu) in a prospective multicenter diagnostic study of patients presenting to the emergen...

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