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Cardiac biomarkers in chronic renal disease.

Cardiac biomarkers have a complex interrelationship with disease pathophysiology in patients with renal dysfunction. The underlying clinical condition results in a direct effect on the normal release and clearance of cardiac troponins and natriuretic peptides. Although initial reports suggested that this might prove a major limitation in the routine clinical use of these markers, a combination of improved assay performance and a better understanding of the underlying biochemistry of these markers in health and disease has clarified the situation. Renal dysfunction does not provide a significant practical limitation to the use of cardiac biomarkers for diagnosis in acute presentation of cardiovascular disease. The direct relationship between cardiac biomarkers and renal dysfunction reflects the high incidence of cardiovascular disease and cardiac death in patients with renal dysfunction and end-stage renal disease. Elevations of the cardiac troponins are prognostic in patients with renal dysfunction and represent global diffuse myocardial injury. Elevations of natriuretic peptides also occur due to abnormalities of ventricular function. In addition, background levels will be affected by fluid and electrolyte abnormalities due to renal dysfunction. This will directly affect vascular volume and fluid distribution altering atrial and ventricular wall tension and hence rates of natriuretic peptide release and production. The challenge is for the renal physician to translate the potential for cardiovascular disease monitoring conferred by these biomarkers into improved patient management.

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