학술논문

The role of routine postoperative troponin measurement in the diagnosis and management of myocardial injury after non-cardiac surgery.
Document Type
Editorial
Source
Anaesthesia. Jan2021, Vol. 76 Issue 1, p11-14. 4p.
Subject
*CARDIAC surgery
*TROPONIN
*VASCULAR surgery
*OPERATIVE surgery
*SURGICAL complications
*MYOCARDIAL injury
*RISK assessment
*RESEARCH funding
*ROUTINE diagnostic tests
Language
ISSN
0003-2409
Abstract
Keywords: mortality; myocardial injury; non-cardiac surgery; pre-operative evaluation: myocardial injury; troponin EN mortality myocardial injury non-cardiac surgery pre-operative evaluation: myocardial injury troponin 11 14 4 12/11/20 20210101 NES 210101 Postoperative troponin elevation strongly predicts major complications and death after cardiac and non-cardiac surgery 1,2. Myocardial injury after non-cardiac surgery is predominantly silent, occurring in 5-25% of patients recovering from non-cardiac surgery, depending on baseline risk 1,3,4,5. Some patients have troponin elevation due to silent acute coronary events following non-cardiac surgery without meeting the diagnostic criteria for acute myocardial infarction per the Fourth Universal Definition of Myocardial Infarction 5. Percutaneous intervention for myocardial infarction after non-cardiac surgery: patient characteristics and outcomes. [Extracted from the article]