From the Journals

Cardiac issues twice as likely with COVID plus high troponin


 

‘Tour de force’

James A. de Lemos, MD, co-chair of the American Heart Association’s COVID-19 CVD Registry Steering Committee and a professor of medicine at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, said, “This is a tour de force collaboration – obtaining this many MRIs across multiple centers in the pandemic is quite remarkable. The study highlights the multiple different processes that lead to cardiac injury in COVID patients, complements autopsy studies and prior smaller MRI studies, [and] also provides the best data on the rate of myocarditis to date among the subset of COVID patients with cardiac injury.”

Overall, he said, the findings “do support closer follow-up for patients who had COVID and elevated troponins. We need to see follow-up MRI results in this cohort, as well as longer term outcomes. We also need studies on newer, more benign variants that are likely to have lower rates of cardiac injury and even fewer MRI abnormalities.”

Matthias Stuber, PhD, and Aaron L. Baggish, MD, both of Lausanne University Hospital and University of Lausanne, Switzerland, noted in a related editorial, “We are also reminded that the clinical severity of COVID-19 is most often dictated by the presence of pre-existing comorbidity, with antecedent ischemic scar now added to the long list of bad actors. Although not the primary focus of the COVID-HEART study, the question of whether cardiac troponin levels should be checked routinely and universally during the index admission for COVID-19 remains unresolved,” they noted.

“In general, we are most effective as clinicians when we use tests to confirm or rule out the specific disease processes suspected by careful basic clinical assessment rather than in a shotgun manner among undifferentiated all-comers,” they conclude.

No commercial funding or relevant financial relationships were reported.

A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Persistent gaps in drug use by patients with type 2 diabetes
MDedge Family Medicine
What is the psychological cost of performing CPR?
MDedge Family Medicine
Acute cardiac events common during COVID hospitalization
MDedge Family Medicine
Drinking tea can keep your heart healthy as you age
MDedge Family Medicine
Three wild technologies about to change health care
MDedge Family Medicine
USPSTF backs screening for hypertensive disorders of pregnancy
MDedge Family Medicine
A doctor intervenes in a fiery car crash
MDedge Family Medicine
Must-read acute care medicine articles from 2022
MDedge Family Medicine
UnitedHealthcare tried to deny coverage to a chronically ill patient. He fought back, exposing the insurer’s inner workings.
MDedge Family Medicine
Joint effort: CBD not just innocent bystander in weed
MDedge Family Medicine