AI Article Synopsis

  • Inflammation is recognized as a significant factor in cardiovascular disease, prompting research into anti-inflammatory interventions and their effects on CRP levels, although human studies are limited.
  • A study involving 42 patients with NSTEMI utilized multi-site blood sampling to measure CRP concentrations in relation to coronary circulation and found no trans-lesional gradient but a notable decrease in CRP from systemic arterial to coronary sinus samples.
  • The findings suggest that there is a net uptake of CRP by the myocardium in humans, indicating its involvement in both injured and nearby heart tissue during NSTEMI.

Article Abstract

Background And Aims: Inflammation has become a key element in cardiovascular disease, and recently, new anti-inflammatory interventions have shown promising results. In this context, CRP levels have been thoroughly studied in vitro and in animals, but studies in humans are scarce and insights into its release, site(s) of production and uptake are not uniform.

Methods: We performed a biomarker study with multi-site sampling in the coronary circulation, in non-ST elevation MI (NSTEMI) patients with coronary angiography and right-sided catheterisation. Trans-lesional gradients were obtained by sampling distal to the culprit lesion, in patients with a suitable anatomy. To asses trans-cardiac gradients, blood was sampled from the systemic circulation, coronary sinus (CS) and great cardiac vein. Concentrations of CRP were measured with a high-sensitivity assay.

Results: In 42 patients, a median systemic venous CRP concentration of 4.97 mg/L was observed. There was no evidence of a trans-lesional gradient (4.59 mg/L versus 4.56 mg/L, p = 0.278; n = 14). A significant decrease in CRP concentration was observed between systemic arterial and CS samples (4.88 mg/L versus 4.44 mg/L; p < 0.001; n = 42). This trans-cardiac gradient was irrespective of time of presentation, infarct size and culprit lesion location. The gradient was not only driven by blood that ran through the injured myocardium, but also by lower CRP concentrations in the coronary veins that drain non-infarcted myocardium.

Conclusions: In the context of NSTEMI, we observed a trans-cardiac decrease in CRP, which may indicate the first human in vivo proof of a net CRP uptake by the myocardium, with a role for CRP both in the injured and adjacent myocardium.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.atherosclerosis.2018.09.024DOI Listing

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