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Troponin efficacy in the diagnosis of acute coronary syndrome in patients with chronic renal failure.

There is no consensus on whether cardiac troponins with high reliability values should be different diagnostic criteria for acute myocardial infarction in patients with and without renal dysfunction. Although it is often emphasized that the etiology of elevated troponin levels in chronic kidney disease (CKD) remains unclear, elevated cardiac troponin (cTnT) levels have been associated with increased subclinical cardiac damage in these patient groups. In this study, we investigated the value of cTnT value in diagnosing acute coronary syndrome in CKD patients with high clinical suspicion of acute coronary syndrome and without acute ST segment elevation on electrocardiogram. The aim was to prevent cardiac ischemia from being overlooked in CKD patients. Coronary angiography revealed vessel occlusion in 192 patients, and the mortality rate after treatment decisions was 6.7%. The first measured troponin results showed a significant difference in patients who did not survive, indicating the prognostic value of troponin levels. Troponin values were compared with cardiovascular pathologies obtained by angiography, and elevated troponin levels strongly correlated with pathologic angiography results. The conclusion highlighted that despite prognostic uncertainties, biomarkers used for acute myocardial infarction diagnosis in patients with renal insufficiency are reliable in those with renal dysfunction. Elevated cTnT levels in CKD patients are considered a clear marker of cardiac ischemia, emphasizing the need for careful consideration of troponin values in this population.

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