C-reactive protein and Cardiac Repolarisation: A Comparison between Coronary Artery Disease and Cirrhosis Patients

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A recent study has found that‌ the relationship between inflammation and heart ⁤rhythm stability is influenced by various factors, depending⁣ on whether ⁤a patient has coronary ‍disease or‌ cirrhosis.

The​ predictive power of⁣ key inflammatory markers, such as C-reactive protein, differs significantly depending on the specific condition a patient is​ suffering from. This was discovered in​ a new study​ published in the Bulgarian Society of Medical Sciences Journal.

Electrocardiograms ⁤are used to measure ​ventricular repolarization, which refers ‍to the time it takes for the heart muscle‌ to reset after‌ each beat. This is considered an essential indicator of heart health ⁢stability. The main factors that affect this electrical function are the pumping ability of the left⁢ ventricle and ⁢activity of the autonomic nervous system.Inflammatory diseases like liver ​failure or coronary‍ blockage can‌ disrupt ⁢these factors and led to ​increased inflammation.

contrasting Inflammation and Heart⁤ Rhythm instability Across Diseases

This ‍study aimed to ‍compare how inflammation⁤ affects heart rhythm instability ‌in⁣ different diseases localized in different systems.

“Most studies on markers of inflammation come from patients with cardiovascular ‌diseases⁤ like​ coronary artery disease,” explains ​Dr. Niya Emilova‍ from University Emergency Medicine‍ Hospital Pirogov in Sofia, Bulgaria who led this research⁤ project.

The researchers‌ measured three⁣ primary inflammation markers: white blood cell count, C-reactive⁤ protein, ⁣and procalcitonin. White‍ blood cell count refers to the‌ number of infection-fighting cells ⁤in the body,while C-reactive protein is‍ produced in response to systemic ​inflammation.‍ Procalcitonin is a highly ⁢specific ⁢indicator of bacterial infection.

Their ⁢paper titled “C-reactive protein ⁣is‍ closely⁣ related to ⁢cardiac repolarization⁢ in patients ⁤with coronary artery disease in contrast to patients with cirrhosis” reveals that C-reactive⁢ protein is associated ‌with an increased ⁢risk of ventricular ‌arrhythmias in stable coronary disease. In contrast, both C-reactive protein ⁢and white blood cell ‍count were ‌found to be correlated with ‍repolarization indices in acute myocardial infarction.

In cirrhosis patients, only high white blood cell​ counts ⁤showed a trend for linking to unstable ‌heart rhythms. Interestingly, C-reactive protein did not correlate with ​heart rhythms⁤ in this group.

“White blood cell counts ⁣and procalcitonin levels are⁢ associated⁢ with‍ an increased risk of complications in alcoholic cirrhosis. In patients receiving treatment for cirrhosis and infection,‍ high white ⁢blood cell counts are a specific⁢ marker for increased dispersion of repolarization,” write​ the researchers.

Implications for Treatment

The‍ study ⁢suggests that‍ certain medications used to treat heart‌ failure ⁤and coronary disease may have preventive ⁣value ⁤by⁢ reducing the risk of⁢ life-threatening cardiac arrhythmias in patients with cirrhosis.

Original ⁣source:

Emilova N, Dineva D, Moneva-Sakelarieva M, ‌Kobakova Y, Chaneva M, ⁢Ionchev I, Slaveva D, Popova M, Tododrov R,​ Kostov K, Sarakostova ⁣S (2026) C-reactive protein⁤ and cardiac repolarization in cirrhosis. Bulgarian Society of Medical Sciences Journal 8: e154296. https://doi.org/10.3897/bsms.8.154296

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