Abstract

The aim of this paper was to investigate the diagnostic significance and severity assessment of serum neuron-specific enolase (NSE) combined with homocysteine (Hcy) for patients with coronary atherosclerosis (coronary artery disease, CAD). Two hundred sixty-three patients with coronary artery disease were selected as the research group, and 400 healthy individuals who underwent physical examination during the same period were taken as the control group. Electrochemiluminescence immunoassay and biochemical analyzer were employed to detect the serum NSE and Hcy levels of all subjects. The diagnostic value of combined and individual serum NSE and Hcy detection for the combined group was analyzed using the ROC curve. The serum NSE (19.91±9.98 vs. 11.17±2.35) and Hcy levels (15.76±5.37 vs. 10.17±3.71) in the research group were significantly higher than those in the control group, with a statistically significant difference (P<0.05). The serum NSE (16.67±4.02 vs. 18.63±5.49 vs. 20.29±5.87) and Hcy levels (13.28±2.49 vs. 15.56±2.67 vs. 16.66±3.94) gradually increased across groups A, B, and C, and inter-group comparisons showed statistically significant differences (P<0.05). The AUC value of combined serum NSE and Hcy detection for CAD patients was higher (0.879 vs. 0.724 vs. 0.827) than individual NSE and Hcy testing. The specificity of Hcy for the diagnosis of CAD was the highest, reaching 90.3%. The sensitivity of combined NSE and Hcy (82.9%) was higher than the individual testing sensitivity of the two groups. The combined detection of serum NSE and Hcy has high diagnostic efficacy for CAD and provides reference value in assessing the severity of the disease.

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