Cor Vasa 2003, 44(12):592-595

Biochemical markers of collagen metabolism in patients with acute myocardial infarction. Another prognostic marker?

Radovan Jirmář1,*, Václav Pelouch2, Petr Widimský1
1 III. interní-kardiologická klinika, Fakultní nemocnice Královské Vinohrady a 3. lékařská fakulta Univerzity Karlovy
2 Ústav lékařské chemie a biochemie, 2. lékařská fakulta Univerzity Karlovy, Praha, Česká republika

There is little doubt that current cardiology has increasingly used biochemical markers in assessing the prognosis of patients after myocardial infarction (MI). Methods reflecting myocyte damage (troponins I and T, CK-M) have been established in clinical practice. In recent years, several studies have documented the prognostic value of inflammatory markers (CRP, interleukin 6, TNF). In this context, little is known about the role played by the extracellular matrix (ECM) and, particularly, about collagen metabolism and its alterations in MI healing and, also, about the prognostic value of these metabolic changes. The authors present a summary of current concepts on changes in post-IM myocardial collagen metabolism based on clinical trials addressing this issue. The trial used the method of determining the serum levels of collagen metabolism markers (PICP, ICTP, PIIINP) to assess their prognostic value. A correlation has been repeatedly demonstrated between the serum levels of PICP, PIIINP, as determined in the subacute MI period, extent of left ventricular remodeling or its altered function, and the incidence of post-MI clinical events such as heart failure and cardiac death. Collagen I and III degradation and synthesis have been shown to start very early after MI. The process of synthesis continues as many as several months post-MI, with collagen III synthesis initially prevailing to be later dominated by collagen I synthesis. At 30 days post-MI, patients undergoing successful revascularization showed significantly lower collagen I and III synthesis rates. In conclusion, collagen metabolism markers are not only able to reflect changes in ECM in the process of MI healing but, also, to assess the development of left ventricular function after MI and some clinical cardiac complications of MI even in the long term.

Keywords: Collagen; Left ventricular remodeling; Myocardial infarction; Biochemistry

Published: December 1, 2003  Show citation

ACS AIP APA ASA Harvard Chicago Chicago Notes IEEE ISO690 MLA NLM Turabian Vancouver
Jirmář R, Pelouch V, Widimský P. Biochemical markers of collagen metabolism in patients with acute myocardial infarction. Another prognostic marker? Cor Vasa. 2003;44(12):592-595.
Download citation




Cor et Vasa

You are accessing a site intended for medical professionals, not the lay public. The site may also contain information that is intended only for persons authorized to prescribe and dispense medicinal products for human use.

I therefore confirm that I am a healthcare professional under Act 40/1995 Coll. as amended by later regulations and that I have read the definition of a healthcare professional.