Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (cirrhosis)
42,195 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

It has been shown that certain patients with cirrhosis have asymptomatic cardiac abnormalities that have not yet been explained. Thus, cardiac troponin I, a specific marker of myocardial injury, has been measured in patients with cirrhosis without previous cardiac disease. Thirty-two consecutive patients (age 49 +/- 11) with cirrhosis and normal ECG were selected, 22 of which were alcoholic. Hemodynamic investigations were performed. Left ventricular function and mass were evaluated by echocardiography. Serum creatine kinase MB mass, myoglobin, and cardiac troponin I concentrations were measured. Cardiac troponin I concentrations were elevated in 10 patients (32%) (range 0.06-0.25 microg/L) whereas creatine kinase MB mass and myoglobin were normal in all patients. Abnormal troponin I values were not related to the severity of cirrhosis, to the degree of portal hypertension, or to other hemodynamic values. In contrast, elevated serum cardiac troponin I concentrations were related to a decreased stroke-volume index (P <. 05) and a decreased left ventricular mass (P <.05). These results show a high prevalence of slightly elevated serum cardiac troponin I in patients with cirrhosis, especially in those with alcoholic cirrhosis. Elevated troponin I is associated with subclinical left ventricular myocardial damage. These findings may be linked to a lack of left ventricular adaptation in certain patients with cirrhosis and alcoholic cardiomyopathy.
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PMID:Elevated circulating cardiac troponin I in patients with cirrhosis. 1005 61

Cardiac troponin I levels are frequently above normal values in several disease states in which myocardial necrosis is not a prominent aspect, particularly in pulmonary embolism, heart failure, liver cirrhosis, septic shock, renal failure and arterial hypertension. Sub-clinical myocardial necrosis has been postulated to be the cause of the phenomenon. Studies performed so far have not included pathological data to confirm this hypothesis. Increased troponin I plasma levels may be the result of myocardial strain, especially the type of strain that accompanies some forms of cardiac dilatation or hypertrophy. Troponin I may act as a marker of myocardial strain, either acute (in pulmonary embolism, septic shock and acute heart failure) or chronic (in chronic cardiac, renal and hepatic failure, as well as in arterial hypertension). The apparent paradox of elevated levels of troponin I without elevated levels of creatine kinase in several disease states might be solved if troponin I could be released from myocardial cells without the disruption of myocardial cell plasma membranes. Precise pathological studies are needed to elucidate whether increased troponin I with normal CK is associated with myocyte death, and, if so, with necrosis or with apoptosis.
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PMID:Cardiac troponin I in systemic diseases. A possible role for myocardial strain. 1158 28