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Therapeutic Advances in Cardiovascular Disease 2008-Dec

Elevated infection parameters and infection symptoms predict an acute coronary event.

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Erkki Pesonen
Eva Andsberg
Anders Grubb
Hilpi Rautelin
Seppo Meri
Kenneth Persson
Mirja Puolakkainen
Seppo Sarna
Hans Ohlin

Keywords

Abstract

BACKGROUND

The etiology and significance of flu-like symptoms often appearing before myocardial infarction should be clarified.

METHODS

In a case-control study of 323 matched controls and a random sample of 110 out of 351 cases the presence of infection symptoms during the preceding four weeks before admission were asked and blood samples taken.

RESULTS

Enterovirus (EV), herpes simplex virus (HSV), and Chlamydia pneumoniae IgA titers were significantly higher in cases than in controls (p<0.001, 0.008 and 0.046, respectively). Flu-like symptoms appeared significantly more often in patients than in controls the most common one being fatigue (p<0.001). In controls with fatigue, EV and HSV titers showed a trend to be higher (1.50 vs 1.45 and 4.29 vs 3.73) than in controls without fatigue but only HSV titers were statistically significantly higher (3.47 vs 3.96, p = 0.02). Even CRP and amyloid A concentrations (3.49 vs 2.08, p<0.0001 and 5.70 vs 3.77 mg/l, p = 0.003, respectively) as well as C4 (0.40 vs 0.44, p = 0.02) were higher in controls with fatigue.

CONCLUSIONS

Odds ratios for a coronary event in a logistic regression model were 4.79 for fatigue and 2.72 for EV antibody levels in their fourth quartile. A linear-by-linear association test showed increasing number of single symptoms with higher EV titer quartiles (p = 0.004).

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