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Clinical Research

Serum N-terminal proBNP, not troponin I, at presentation predicts long-term neurologic outcome in acute charcoal-burning carbon monoxide intoxication

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Pages 412-420 | Received 04 Jul 2017, Accepted 14 Oct 2017, Published online: 25 Oct 2017
 

Abstract

Objective: This study aimed to investigate whether the serum N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP) and troponin I levels at emergency department (ED) presentation predict long-term neurologic outcomes after acute charcoal-burning carbon monoxide (CO) poisoning.

Methods: This retrospective study included 220 patients suffering from charcoal-burning CO poisoning. The demographics, serum NT-proBNP and troponin I levels at ED presentation, treatment, clinical course during hospitalization, and long-term neurologic outcomes were collected.

Results: The median serum NT-proBNP level at presentation was 48.8 (16.5–259) pg/mL, and 78 patients (35.5%) had elevated troponin I (>0.04 ng/mL) after acute charcoal-burning CO poisoning. The upper NT-proBNP and elevated troponin I groups had higher prevalences of respiratory failure, hypotension, and myocardial injury during hospitalization and altered mentality (GCS ≤14) at discharge than the lower NT-proBNP and normal troponin I groups. The incidence of persistent severe neurologic sequelae at 25 months after acute CO poisoning was 10.9%. The upper NT-proBNP and elevated troponin I groups had a higher incidence of poor long-term neurologic outcome than the counterpart groups. Log-transformed NT-proBNP and elevated troponin I were associated with poor long-term neurologic outcome in the univariate analysis, but only the adjusted log-transformed NT-proBNP remained an independent factor in the multivariate analysis. Compared with a predictive model including previously proposed predictors, the addition of log NT-proBNP improved the diagnostic accuracy for predicting poor long-term neurologic outcome. The serum NT-proBNP values for predicting poor long-term neurologic outcome were 74.6 and 32.7 pg/mL at fixed sensitivities of 95 and 99%, respectively.

Conclusions: Elevated serum NT-proBNP at ED presentation is correlated with a risk of poor long-term neurologic outcome after discharge in cases of acute charcoal-burning CO poisoning. NT-proBNP could significantly improve the risk stratification of patients who will experience poor long-term neurologic outcome after CO poisoning. This potentially valuable marker should be further validated.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Geolocation information

This study was conducted in Gwangju, South Korea.

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