| Literature DB >> 30367446 |
Lakshman Manjunath1, Apurva Yeluru2, Fatima Rodriguez2,3.
Abstract
In this case report, we describe a young athletic male with a family history of early sudden cardiac death who presented with atypical chest pain and was found to have a positive serum troponin. Although his symptoms resolved without intervention, workup revealed hypertension, hyperlipidemia, mild left ventricular hypertrophy, non-obstructive coronary artery disease, and the presence of serum heterophile antibodies. Ultimately, it was concluded that his rigorous exercise regimen as well as the presence of heterophile antibodies may have contributed to his positive serum troponin. This case serves as a reminder of the nonspecific diagnostic value of modern troponin assays, and that the results of these tests should always be incorporated into the clinical context.Entities:
Keywords: Exercise; False positive; Heterophile antibody; Myocardial ischemia; Troponin
Year: 2018 PMID: 30367446 PMCID: PMC6251827 DOI: 10.1007/s40119-018-0120-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cardiol Ther ISSN: 2193-6544
Fig. 1ECG on presentation showed sinus rhythm at 66 beats per minute, with normal axis and intervals. There were no ST or T-wave changes
Fig. 2CCTA showed mild non-obstructive CAD in the left anterior descending artery as labeled
Fig. 3cMRI did not show any abnormalities
Causes of serum cardiac troponin elevations including false-positive troponinemia
| Ischemic | Non-ischemic | False-positive troponin | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cardiac | Acute coronary syndrome | Myocarditis/pericarditis | High alkaline phosphatase levels |
| Oxygen supply/demand mismatch | Infectious | Heterophile antibody | |
| Hypertension | Non-infectious/autoimmune | Troponin-specific autoantibody | |
| Tachycardia/arrhythmia | Infiltrative disease | Rheumatoid factor | |
| Anemia | Trauma (cardiac contusion) | Fibrin clots | |
| Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy | Electric shock (cardioversion) | Endogenous substances | |
| Drugs (cocaine, methamphetamines) | Ablation procedures | Hemoglobin, bilirubin, lipids | |
| Non-atherosclerotic coronary disease | Congestive heart failure | Biotin | |
| Coronary vasospasm | Drug-induced (trastuzumab, anthracyclines) | Instrument malfunction | |
| Coronary embolus | Machine calibration error | ||
| Coronary artery vasculitis | |||
| Aortic dissection | |||
| Post-revascularization | |||
| Non-cardiac | Pulmonary embolism | Renal failure | |
| Sepsis/shock/hypoperfusion | Stroke/intracranial hemorrhage | ||
| Hypoxia | Significant burns | ||
| Critical illness | |||
| Cardiothoracic surgery |
Timeline of events
| Time | Events |
|---|---|
| Prior to November 2017 | The patient participated in moderate to intense aerobic activity several times per week |
| November 2017: Day 1 | He presented with chest pressure to the emergency room and was found to have an elevated serum troponin I of 0.123 ng/ml and evidence of dyslipidemia with a fasting total cholesterol 235 mg/dl, direct LDL 170 mg/dl, HDL 38 mg/dl, and triglycerides 124 mg/dl. These findings, in conjunction with a family history of sudden cardiac death, led to an admission to the cardiology service for further evaluation |
| Day 2 | CCTA showed mild, non-obstructive CAD in the left anterior descending artery. TTE showed mild LVH. Telemetry and serial ECG monitoring was unremarkable. The patient’s chest pressure resolved and he was discharged from the hospital |
| December 2017 through January 2018 | The patient continued to participate in aerobic activity multiple times per week |
| Late January 2018 | The patient presented for follow-up in clinic and was asymptomatic. Repeat laboratory values showed a serum troponin I level of 0.213 ng/ml, CK of 453 U/l (normal < 300 U/l). cMRI was unremarkable. He was started on aspirin (81 mg daily) and rosuvastatin (20 mg daily) and instructed to refrain from exercise until the next clinic visit in 1 week |
| Early February 2018 | The patient presented to his second clinic visit and was again asymptomatic. Testing on serum from the prior clinic visit revealed the presence of a heterophile antibody. Repeat testing of his serum showed an improved lipid profile and a negative troponin I |