Authors: Mary A. Williamson Mt(ascp) Phd,L. Michael Snyder Md
Limitations
cTnT may be increased in some patients with skeletal muscle injury and myotonic dystrophy but not in third-generation assays. cTnI is not increased by skeletal muscle injury, making it more highly specific for myocardial injury.
Heterophile antibodies are one of the most common reasons for false-positive results due to interference with the immunoassay. Human antimouse antibodies, autoantibodies, rheumatoid factor also may cause false-positive results in addition to hemolysis of sample or fibrin clots in the specimen.
Unfortunately, most point-of-care assays are not as sensitive as those performed in central laboratories. If a single value is out of proportion to others, it is recommended to respin the point-of-care sample and reanalyze.
As troponin is able to detect very early stages of disease and confer a worse prognosis if elevated, if confounding factors for laboratory analysis of troponin are suspected, the use of other cardiac biomarkers in addition to direct cardiac imaging (or biopsy for transplant recipients) is strongly recommended.
Suggested Readings
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Morrow DA, Cannon CP, Jesse RL, et al. National Academy of Clinical Biochemistry. National Academy of Clinical Biochemistry Laboratory Medicine Practice Guidelines: Clinical characteristics and utilization of biochemical markers in acute coronary syndromes.
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Starrow AB, Apple FS, Wu AH, et al. National Academy of Clinical Biochemistry Laboratory Medicine Practice Guidelines: point of care testing, oversight, and administration of cardiac biomarkers for acute coronary syndromes.
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Thygesen K, Alpert JS, White HD, Joint ESC/ACCF/AHA/WHF Task Redefinition myocardial infarction.
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Circulation
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J Am Coll Cardiol
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Online April 25. Doi: 10.1136/heart jnl-2012-303202
UREA NITROGEN, URINE
Definition
Urea is a low molecular weight substance that is freely filtered by glomeruli, and the majority is excreted into the urine, although variable amounts are reabsorbed along the nephron. Urine urea nitrogen is a measure of protein breakdown in the body. Urea is excreted by the kidneys, so excretion of urea can reflect kidney function. Approximately 50% of urinary solute excretion and 90–95% of total nitrogen excretion is composed of urea under normal conditions.
Normal range:
Twenty-four–hour urine: 2–20 g/day
Random urine: