â– LECTURE OVERVIEW: Releasing intracellular structural proteins into circulation following cardiomyocyte necrosis follows a highly reproducible kinetic curve.
â– INFARCT MARKER PROFILES:
1. Myoglobin (Small, Cytosolic):
- Rises: 1-2 hours (earliest marker).
- Peak: 4-8 hours.
- Clears: 24 hours. (Highly non-specific; also rises in skeletal muscle injury).
2. Cardiac Troponins (I and T):
- Rises: 3-12 hours.
- Peak: 24 hours.
- Clears: Remains elevated for 7-10 days (Troponin I) or up to 14 days (Troponin T). (Gold-standard for screening and confirming acute coronary syndrome).
3. CK-MB (Creatine Kinase-MB Isoenzyme):
- Rises: 4-6 hours.
- Peak: 24 hours.
- Clears: 48-72 hours.
â– RADIOGRAPHIC DIAGNOSTIC CRITERIA:
Imaging modalities (such as high-resolution CT, contrast-enhanced MRI, and point-of-care ultrasound) show characteristic density shifts, enhancement patterns, or structural deviations.
â– DIAGNOSTIC FLOW ALGORITHM:
When initial screening yields ambiguous results, utilize highly discrete confirmatory assays or magnetic imaging sweeps to establish structural parameters.
[HY-BOARD-1277]
🌟 Dynamic Clinical Key:
Because CK-MB returns to baseline within 48-72 hours, while cardiac troponins remain elevated for a week, CK-MB is the diagnostic biomarker of choice to evaluate for re-infarction (re-occlusion of the coronary artery) in patients who develop recurrent, acute chest pain shortly after their initial myocardial infarction. Always correlate imaging signs with clinical presentation to avoid unnecessary surgical explorations of benign incidentalomas. Avoid premature diagnostic closure before reviewing all essential imaging planes.