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BIOCHEMICAL MARKERS OF CARDIAC INJURY IN NORMAL AND SURVIVING VERSUS NON‐SURVIVING SEPTICEMIC NEONATAL FOALS
Author(s) -
Peek SF,
Slack JA,
Darien BJ,
Semrad SD,
Marques F,
Risberg A,
Erb HN,
Apple FS,
McGuirk SM
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
journal of veterinary emergency and critical care
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.886
H-Index - 47
eISSN - 1476-4431
pISSN - 1479-3261
DOI - 10.1111/j.1476-4431.2004.t01-37-04035.x
Subject(s) - medicine , sepsis , septic shock , troponin , neonatal sepsis , troponin i , clinical significance , myocardial infarction
Although myocardial injury can be a significant component of multiple organ dysfunction (MODS) in association with septicemia in critically ill human patients, it is as yet an undefined clinical entity in equine septicemia. With septicemia as the leading cause of death in neonatal foals, a better understanding of the pathophysiology, diagnosis and treatment of MODS will be important in further improving survival rates. We designed a prospective study to establish normal ranges for cardiac troponin I (cTnI), T (cTnT) and CKMB mass in healthy 24–48 hour old foals, as well as septicemic neonatal foals seen over a 2‐year period in a teaching hospital. We also performed a comparison of these biomarkers in surviving and non‐surviving septicemic foals. Sepsis was judged on the basis of the presence of any of the 3 following criteria: blood culture positive at admission, admission sepsis score ≥11, or 3 or more sites of infection during hospitalization in foals ≤14 days of age. cTnI was measured by the ACCESS® (Beckman Coulter), cTnT was measured using the Elecsys 2010® Immunoassay (Roche), and CKMB mass measurements were performed using the Elecsys 2010®. Each parameter was described using range and 95 th and 50 th percentile. Comparisons were made for each parameter between normal and septic foals as well as surviving and non‐surviving septic foals using the non‐parametric Wilcoxon's rank sum test. Significance was set at p<0.05. There were 52 control foals and 38 septic foals of which 22 survived. Significant differences were documented for CKMB between septicemic and normal foals, but not for cTnT or cTnI. However, CKMB and cTnT were significantly lower in surviving versus non‐surviving septicemic foals. The 50 th and 95 th percentiles alongside the ranges for the normal foal population were 0.14, 0.49, (0.01–0.51) μg/L for cTnI, 0.009, 0.03, (0.009–0.04) μg/L for cTnT and 2.3, 7.4, (0.4–9.3) μg/L for CKMB. Our findings suggest that myocardial injury is a component of MODS during septicemia in foals, and that quantitatively significant increases in CKMB and cTnT are seen in non‐surviving septicemic foals versus survivors.