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Postmortem plasma pentraxin 3 is a useful marker of fatal acute coronary syndrome.

Misa TojoKaori Shintani-IshidaHajime TsuboiMami NakamuraNozomi IdotaHiroshi Ikegaya
Published in: Scientific reports (2019)
Pentraxin 3 (PTX3) is an acute-phase protein that belongs to the pentraxin superfamily. Recently, many clinical studies have demonstrated that plasma PTX3 concentrations rapidly increase in patients with the acute coronary syndrome (ACS). The aim of this study was to evaluate the forensic utility of postmortem plasma PTX3 as a marker of fatal ACS. We compared the plasma PTX3 concentration in cadavers with suspected fatal ACS to that exhibited in control cases (e.g., asphyxia and immediate death due to a fatal injury). The ACS groups included a coronary stenosis group, which exhibited apparent coronary stenosis, but an absence of coronary thrombi, a coronary thrombi group with thrombi found in the coronary artery, and a group of myocardial rupture following an acute myocardial infarction. The plasma PTX3 concentration was significantly higher in the coronary thrombi group than the control group and other ACS groups. The postmortem plasma PTX3 concentration was higher than the clinical reference values, which appeared to be caused by a postmortem release from circulating neutrophils. In conclusion, although the clinical reference value cannot be applied to postmortem samples, the postmortem plasma PTX3 concentration may be a useful marker of death occurring immediately after the onset of fatal ACS.
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