Abstract

Total creatine kinase (CK) and the myocardial isoenzyme CK MB activity were prospectively determined in 282 children hospitalized for cardiac catheterization and evaluation for suspected congenital cardiac abnormalities and compared with a hospitalized control group of children without such abnormalities. The percent CK MB and CK MB activity were abnormally elevated in symptomatic children with a large left to right shunt due either to a large ventricular septal defect (n = 22; p < 0.001) or to complete atrioventricular canal (n = 10; p < 0.001). Serum CK MB activity and percent CK MB were significantly related to the size of the shunt and the age of presentation with clinical symptoms of congestive heart failure in infants with a ventricular septal defect. CK MB activity was abnormally elevated in infants with symptomatic coarctation of the aorta, either with or without a ventricular septal defect (n = 15; p < 0.001), and in infants with symptomatic aortic stenosis (n = 4; p < 0.02). In contrast, CK MB activity was normal in asymptomatic children with coarctation of the aorta (n = 14) or aortic stenosis (n = 8) despite comparable systolic pressure gradients. CK MB activity and percent CK MB were abnormally elevated in those children with the cyanotic congenital cardiac abnormalities of either transposition of the great arteries (n = 32; p < 0.001) or right ventricular outflow tract obstruction (n = 31; p < 0.001). These results suggest that children with congenital cardiac abnormalities may have significant myocardial cell injury and release of CK MB that may be detected by the determination of serum CK MB activity. Cell injury may be secondary to arterial desaturation or acute pressure-volume overload, or both, as manifested by clinical symptoms of heart failure and measured hemodynamic variables.

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