Hyperglycemia, inflammatory response and infarct size in obstructive acute myocardial infarction and MINOCA

Pasquale Paolisso(University of Bologna), Alberto Foà(University of Bologna), Luca Bergamaschi(University of Bologna), Francesco Donati(University of Bologna), Michele Fabrizio(University of Bologna), Chiara Chiti(University of Bologna), Francesco Angeli(University of Bologna), S Toniolo(University of Bologna), Andrea Stefanizzi(University of Bologna), Matteo Armillotta(University of Bologna), Paola Rucci(University of Bologna), Gianmarco Iannopollo, Gianni Casella, Cinzia Marrozzini(University of Bologna), Nazzareno Galiè(University of Bologna), Carmine Pizzi(University of Bologna)
Cardiovascular Diabetology
February 2, 2021
Cited by 126Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Hyperglycemia has been associated with increased inflammatory indexes and larger infarct sizes in patients with obstructive acute myocardial infarction (obs-AMI). In contrast, no studies have explored these correlations in non-obstructive acute myocardial infarction (MINOCA). We investigated the relationship between hyperglycemia, inflammation and infarct size in a cohort of AMI patients that included MINOCA. METHODS: Patients with AMI undergoing coronary angiography between 2016 and 2020 were enrolled. The following inflammatory markers were evaluated: C-reactive protein, neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio (NLR), platelet-to-lymphocyte ratio (PLR) and neutrophil-to-platelet ratio (NPR). Myocardial infarct size was measured by peak high sensitivity troponin I (Hs-TnI) levels, left-ventricular-end-diastolic-volume (LVEDV) and left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF). RESULTS: The final study population consisted of 2450 patients with obs-AMI and 239 with MINOCA. Hyperglycemia was more prevalent among obs-AMI cases. In all hyperglycemic patients-obs-AMI and MINOCA-NLR, NPR, and LPR were markedly altered. Hyperglycemic obs-AMI subjects exhibited a higher Hs-TnI (p < 0.001), a larger LVEDV (p = 0.003) and a lower LVEF (p < 0.001) compared to normoglycemic ones. Conversely, MINOCA patients showed a trivial myocardial damage, irrespective of admission glucose levels. CONCLUSIONS: Our data confirm the association of hyperglycemic obs-AMI with elevated inflammatory markers and larger infarct sizes. MINOCA patients exhibited modest myocardial damage, regardless of admission glucose levels.


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