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Abstract

Objective

Chest pain and/or electrocardiogram changes in non-ST elevation or suspicious chest pain and cardiac marker elevations are defined as non-ST-elevation acute coronary syndrome (NSTE-ACS). Serial electrocardiogram and marker follow-up are needed to make a diagnosis of NSTE-ACS and to eliminate noncoronary chest pain (NCCP). Signal peptide-C1r/C1s, Uegf, and Bmp1-epidermal growth factor domain-containing protein 1 (SCUBE1) is stored within thegranules of inactive platelets and secreted at a high rate during thrombosis. We believe that SCUBE1 may be a sensitive early diagnostic indicator in distinguishing coronary-induced chest pain from noncoronary-induced chest pain.

Materials and methods

The study included 190 patients with an initial diagnosis of acute coronary syndrome in the emergency department. Based on a definitive diagnosis, these patients were classified into 3 groups: ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI), NSTE-ACS, and NCCP.

Results

Plasma SCUBE1 levels were significantly higher in the STEMI group when compared with those of the other groups (P< .05). They were also significantly higher in the NSTE-ACS group when compared with those of the NCCP group (P< .01). Troponin I, creatinine kinase, and creatinine kinase MB levels were significantly different in the NSTE-ACS group when compared with those of the NCCP group (P< .05).

Conclusion

High rates of SCUBE1 were found both in the STEMI and NSTE-ACS patients. Furthermore, in the study group, SCUBE1 was an adequate marker for distinguishing NSTE-ACS from NCCP.

Details

Title
The diagnostic role of signal peptide-C1r/C1s, Uegf, and Bmp1-epidermal growth factor domain-containing protein 1 in non-ST-elevation acute coronary syndrome
Author
Sonmez, Ertan; Turkdogan, Kenan Ahmet; Karabacak, Mustafa; Civelek, Cemil; Yilmaz, Cahit; Ozer, Omer Faruk; Çavus, Umut Yücel
Pages
21-24
Publication year
2015
Publication date
2015
Publisher
Elsevier Limited
ISSN
07356757
e-ISSN
15328171
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1636207173
Copyright
Copyright Elsevier Limited 2015