1. [The prognostic value of cytokeratin-18 cell death marker in cardiac arrest survivors].
- Author
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Csiszár B, Németh Á, Márton Z, Riba J, Csécsei P, Molnár T, Deres L, Halmosi R, Tóth K, and Kenyeres P
- Subjects
- Biomarkers blood, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation, Heart Arrest mortality, Humans, Predictive Value of Tests, Prognosis, Survival Analysis, Survivors, Cell Death, Heart Arrest blood, Keratin-18 blood
- Abstract
Introduction: Cytokeratin-18 (CK-18) is releasing into the blood during systemic cell death due to ischemia-reperfusion injury after cardiac arrest. Its caspase-cleaved form is specific to apoptosis. Previous investigations proved their prognostic value in different conditions. We firstly investigated the prognostic value of these markers after cardiac arrest. Method: Plasma samples of 40 resuscitated patients were collected 6, 24, and 72 hours after successful resuscitation to determine the marker concentrations. We investigated the association of the markers with the 30-day mortality, neurological outcome, circumstances of the cardiac arrest, laboratory and physical parameters. Results: Resuscitated patients had highly elevated CK-18 levels (3842 vs. 242; 559; 1644 ng/L) and decreased caspase-cleaved CK-18/CK-18 ratio (0.14 vs. 0.58; 0.22; 0.24) compared to healthy subjects, septic and postoperative patients suggesting severe grade of cell death, mainly necrosis. Neither the marker concentrations nor their kinetics showed difference between survivors and non-survivors. They did not show association with the length of the resuscitation, the initial rhythm or the neurological outcome either. CK-18 decreased in patients with good renal function in contrast to patients with renal failure. Significant negative correlation was observed between the 6-hour cytokeratin-18 and hemoglobin concentrations (r = -0.400, p<0.01), while the 30-day survival was associated with lower hemoglobin levels. Conclusion: Surprisingly the biomarkers did not show prognostic value among resuscitated population. The outcome is probably not determined by the complete cell damage, but the loss of a small group of cells with critical role and the reserve capacity of the patient. Orv Hetil. 2020; 161(1): 26-32.
- Published
- 2020
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