Plasma N terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide and cardiotrophin 1 are raised in unstable angina

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Abstract

Objective - To compare circulating concentrations of N terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide (N-BNP) and cardiotrophin 1 in stable and unstable angina. Design and setting - Observational study in a teaching hospital. Patients - 15 patients with unstable angina, 10 patients with stable angina, and 15 controls. Main outcome measures - Resting plasma N-BNP and cardiotrophin 1 concentrations. Results - N-BNP concentration (median (range)) was 714 fmol/ml (177-3217 fmol/ml) in unstable angina, 169.5 fmol/ml (105.7-399.5 fmol/ml) in stable angina (p = 0.005 v unstable angina), and 150.5 fmol/ml (104.7-236.9 fmol/ml) in controls (p < 0.0001 v unstable angina; NS v stable angina). Cardiotrophin 1 concentration was 142.5 fmol/ml (42.2-527.4 fmol/ml) in unstable angina, 73.2 fmol/ml (41.5-102.1 fmol/ml) in stable angina (p < 0.05 v unstable angina), and 27 fmol/ml (6.9-54.1 fmol/ml) in controls (p < 0.0005 v stable angina; p < 0.0001 v unstable angina). Log cardiotrophin 1 correlated with log N-BNP in unstable angina (r = 0.93, p < 0.0001). Conclusions - Both circulating N-BNP and cardiotrophin 1 are raised in unstable angina, while cardiotrophin 1 alone is raised in stable angina. The role of cardiotrophin 1 and the relation between cardiotrophin 1 and N-BNP in myocardial ischaemia remain to be defined.

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APA

Talwar, S., Squire, I. B., Downie, P. F., Davies, J. E., & Ng, L. L. (2000). Plasma N terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide and cardiotrophin 1 are raised in unstable angina. Heart, 84(4), 421–424. https://doi.org/10.1136/heart.84.4.421

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