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Cardiac troponin I: a potential marker of exercise intolerance in patients with moderate heart failure
Authors:Schulz Olaf  Kromer Ariane
Affiliation:From the aHeinrich-Mann-Hospital for Cardiac Rehabilitation, Bad Liebenstein, and the bCooperative Interventional Cardiology Spandau, Berlin, Germany.
Abstract:Background In severe heart failure, increased values of cardiac troponins have been detected during decompensation. In this study, we investigated whether an increase of cardiac troponin I can be observed after symptom-limited exercise and after an exercise training session in patients with moderate heart failure. Methods Twenty-seven patients with moderate heart failure (New York Heart Association II-III, ejection fraction 31% ± 8%) were compared with 9 patients with mild heart failure and 10 subjects without heart failure. They underwent a symptom-limited exercise test and a bicycle exercise training session at >80% of maximal heart rate over 20 to 30 minutes. Plasma cTnI levels were measured at baseline, after symptom-limited exercise (hourly for 5 hours), and after training (4 and 10 hours). Results Patients with moderate heart failure showed an increase of cTnI from 37 ± 49 pg/mL to 73 ± 59 pg/mL (P < .001) after symptom-limited exercise. Four patients with moderate and 1 with mild heart failure and normal cTnI values at rest showed an increase of cTnI above 100 pg/mL after acute exercise but not after training. Subjects without heart failure had lower cTnI levels at rest and significantly lower values after symptom-limited exercise and training (P < .05 for each). Conclusion Patients with symptomatic heart failure reveal an increase of cTnI after symptom-limited exercise at levels that indicate minor myocardial damage. The prognostic impact of this finding should, therefore, be further investigated. (Am Heart J 2002;144:351-8)
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