Abstract

For the diagnosis of acute myocardial infarction (AMI) in patients circulating constituents of the contractile apparatus may be measured instead of cytosolic cardiac enzymes [ 4, 9, 13, 19]. The potential advantages of the use of myofibrillar cardiac proteins as marker proteins for AMI results from their expression as cardio-specific isoforms, their high intracellular concentration, and their continuous release from infarcting myocardium [ 8, 10, 15, 17, 20]. While analyzing the specificity of polyclonal goat anti-human cardiac myosin light chains antisera a cardio-specific antibody fraction was identified which is directed against cardiac troponin T contaminations of the myosin light chains antigen. Using this antibody fraction a standardized enzyme immuno-assay for circulating troponin T was developed to detect AMI in patients. In this assay troponin T is bound on different epitopes by affinity purified goat anti-cardiac troponin T antibodies immobilized on polyvinyl chloride test tubes as well as horse raddish peroxidase labeled monoclonal anti-troponin T antibody in liquid phase. The assay procedure can be completed semiautomatically in 90 min with a detection limit of the assay of 0.5 ng/ml human or bovine cardiac troponin T. There is 1% crossreactivity with skeletal troponin T. In 26 healthy volunteers no cardiac troponin T was detectable in serum of 25 persons, while in 1 further volunteer 1 ng/ml troponin T was found. In the sera of all 50 patients with transmural AMI troponin T was elevated ranging from 7.2 to 110 ng/ml. In the mean troponin T remained elevated from three until 300 hours after onset of ischemic pain showing a biphasic serum concentration curve. These results show that the diagnosis of AMI can be established by cardiac troponin T measurements. The cardio-specificity of the troponin T molecule and its prolonged elevation in serum indicate a high diagnostic efficacy of troponin T determinations in AMI.

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