cTnI qualifies as a marker for diagnosis of PMI and quantitation of the amount of myocardial damage, because of the availability of a quick diagnostic test with high specificity, the high diagnostic efficiency, and especially the sufficient information gained by a single determination 24 h after aortic unclamping.
The postoperative period after cardiac surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) is associated with a low T3 syndrome, i.e. low T3 and fT3 concentrations in the presence of normal T4 and TSH concentrations. So far, results from studies evaluating thyroid function during and after CPB are rather conflicting. We therefore evaluated prospectively thyroid function in 28 patients before, during and up to 3 days after coronary artery bypass surgery. We could demonstrate the most significant changes in thyroid hormone concentrations on day 1 after CPB (low T3 and fT3 concentrations, elevated rT3 concentrations in the presence of a significant fall of TSH). T3 fell from 1.93 to 0.6 nmol/l and fT3 from 5.5 to 1.42 pmol/l. Those patients with low cardiac output syndrome after surgery had significantly lower T3 concentrations than patients without this complication. Moreover, those patients, who already had significant lower T3 values prior to CPB, also demonstrated low T3 concentrations on day 1 after CPB. Cortisol usually has a suppressive effect on TSH secretion. However, the effect of cortisol on TSH in patients undergoing CPB seems to be not that important: those patients with high endogenous cortisol concentrations on day 1 after CPB had similar TSH values to those patients with only slightly elevated cortisol concentrations. Also, the application of high doses of catecholamines seems to have only minor effects on TSH secretion, because those patients requiring high doses of dopamine over a prolonged time period had essentially the same TSH values after CPB. Patients who had been exposed preoperatively to high doses of iodine did not demonstrate significantly different thyroid hormone concentrations. In conclusion: We could demonstrate that CPB induces a low T3 syndrome up to 3 days after surgery. Those patients with low T3 concentrations prior to surgery demonstrate postoperatively a more severe degree of nonthyroidal illness (NTI).Catecholamines and cortisol seem to have only minor effects on the TSH secretion after CPB. The influence of a previous iodine contamination is negligible.
In isolated, electrically driven right auricular strips of the human heart the inotropic effect of phenylephrine was studied. 1. First, the influence of the driving rate on the tension developed (i.e., the frequency-force relationship) was determined by stimulation of the preparations at 0.1, 0.5, 1, 2 and 3 HZ. The force of contraction was lowest at a stimulation rate of 0.1 HZ (36.9 g/g dry weight). The maximally developed force of contraction observed at frequencies of 0.5, 1 and 2 HZ amounted to about 200 g/g dry weight. The values did not significantly differ from each other. 2. The negative log of the EC50 (-log EC50) for the positive inotropic effect of phenylephrine determined at a frequency of 0.5 and 1.0 HZ amounted to 5.28 +/- 0.08 and 5.34 +/- 0.11, respectively. The alpha-adrenolytic drug phentolamine (3 x 10(-6) M) diminished significantly the -log EC50 to 5.01 +/- 0.04 and 4.89 +/- 0.10, respectively. 3. At a frequency of 1 HZ a shift of the concentration-response curve to the right was observed after treatment with the beta-adrenolytic drug pindolol (3 x 10(-8) M); the -log EC50 of phenylephrine decreased significantly to 4.08 +/- 0.07. 4. From these results it is concluded that alpha-adrenoceptors are present in human atria; they mediate positive inotropic effects and are stimulated by phenylephrine.
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