“…Electrocardiography and echocardiography in these patients rarely demonstrate ischemic changes, and few patients have inducible ischemia on stress testing or occlusive coronary thrombus on autopsy 8, 26, 30. Postulated causes for troponin elevations in septic patients include ischemic mechanisms (eg, supply–demand imbalance or microvascular spasm or thrombosis) and nonischemic mechanisms (eg, reversible myocardial membrane leakage of cytosolic TnT pool or direct cellular toxicity from inflammatory mediators, microbial toxins, or excessive catecholamine levels) 7, 31, 32. While relative hypovolemia, inadequate resuscitation, and prolonged hypotension may contribute to myocardial injury in patients with septic shock, fluid resuscitation does not appear to influence the subsequent values of hs‐TnT on serial testing 12…”