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Dive into the research topics where Margit Müller-Bardorff is active.

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Featured researches published by Margit Müller-Bardorff.


Circulation | 2000

Independent Prognostic Value of Cardiac Troponin T in Patients With Confirmed Pulmonary Embolism

Evangelos Giannitsis; Margit Müller-Bardorff; Volkhard Kurowski; Britta Weidtmann; Uwe K.H. Wiegand; Markus Kampmann; Hugo A. Katus

BACKGROUND Cardiac troponin T (cTnT) is a sensitive and specific marker, allowing the detection of even minor myocardial cell injury. In patients with severe pulmonary embolism (PE), myocardial ischemia may lead to progressive right ventricular dysfunction. It was therefore the purpose of this study to test the presence of cTnT and its prognostic implications in patients with confirmed PE. METHODS AND RESULTS Fifty-six consecutive patients with confirmed PE were enrolled in this prospective study. PE was confirmed by pulmonary angiography, lung scan, or echocardiography and subsidiary analyses. Severity of PE was assessed by a clinical scoring system, and cTnT was measured within 12 hours after admission. cTnT was elevated (>/=0.1 microg/L) in 18 (32%) patients with massive and moderate PE but not in patients with small PE. In-hospital death (odds ratio 29. 6, 95% CI 3.3 to 265.3), prolonged hypotension and cardiogenic shock (odds ratio 11.4, 95% CI 2.1 to 63.4), and need for resuscitation (odds ratio 18.0, 95% CI 2.6 to 124.3) were more prevalent in patients with elevated cTnT. cTnT-positive patients more often needed inotropic support (odds ratio 37.6, 95% CI 5.8 to 245.6) and mechanical ventilation (odds ratio 78.8, 95% CI 9.5 to 653.2). After adjustment, cTnT remained an independent predictor of 30-day mortality (odds ratio 15.2, 95% CI 1.22 to 190.4). CONCLUSIONS cTnT may improve risk stratification in patients with PE and may aid in the identification of patients in whom a more aggressive therapy may be warranted.


Circulation | 1995

Development and Characterization of a Rapid Assay for Bedside Determinations of Cardiac Troponin T

Margit Müller-Bardorff; Helmut Freitag; Thomas Scheffold; Andrew Remppis; Wolfgang Kübler; Hugo A. Katus

BACKGROUND The appearance of cardiac proteins in blood is the most specific and sensitive indicator of acute myocardial cell necrosis. The measurement of cardiac markers, however, is time consuming and requires sophisticated equipment. To facilitate the biochemical detection for acute myocardial cell necrosis, a whole-blood rapid assay device for cardiac troponin T detection was developed that provides a test result within 20 minutes. METHODS AND RESULTS Monoclonal antibody M7 is labeled with gold particles, and antibody 1B10 is labeled with biotin. Both antibodies, as well as buffer substances and detergents, are adsorbed onto paper fleeces mounted below an application well. Heparinized blood (160 microL) applied to this well solubilizes the dry chemistry reagents. Blood cells are separated from plasma via a glass-fiber fleece. The immunocomplexes formed are concentrated within the reading zone by binding of the biotin-labeled antibody with streptavidine immobilized to the test device. Troponin T bound to the test device serves as a control. The detection limit of this assay is 0.18 microgram/L with a cross-reactivity with skeletal troponin T of 0.5%. In clinical analyses involving 25 healthy volunteers, 62 patients with chest pain but without myocardial ischemia, 35 patients with acute myocardial infarction, 24 patients with minor myocardial cell damage due to radiofrequency ablation, and 35 patients with unstable angina, the rapid assay was comparable to the troponin T enzyme immunoassay in regard to sensitivity and specificity. CONCLUSIONS This newly developed assay allows accurate, rapid, and convenient diagnosis of acute myocardial cell necrosis.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1998

Elevated serum concentrations of cardiac troponin T in acute allograft rejection after human heart transplantation

Thomas J. Dengler; Rainer Zimmermann; Klaus Braun; Margit Müller-Bardorff; Jörg Zehelein; Falk-Udo Sack; Philipp A. Schnabel; Wolfgang Kübler; Hugo A. Katus

OBJECTIVES This study evaluates the concept and diagnostic efficacy of using serum troponin T for the detection of cardiac graft rejection. BACKGROUND Cardiac troponin T is a cardiospecific myofibrillar protein, which is only detectable in the circulation after cardiac myocyte damage. It might be expected to be released during acute heart allograft rejection, allowing noninvasive rejection diagnosis. METHODS In 35 control subjects and in 422 samples from 95 clinically unremarkable heart allograft recipients more than 3 months postoperatively, troponin T serum concentrations were compared to the histological grade of acute graft rejection in concurrent endomyocardial biopsies. RESULTS Mean troponin T serum concentrations were identical in control subjects (23.2 +/- 1.4 ng/liter) and in heart transplant recipients without graft rejection (International Society for Heart and Lung Transplantation [ISHLT] grade 0; 22.4 +/- 1.7 ng/liter). Mean troponin T concentrations increased in parallel with the severity of graft rejection (ISHLT grade 1: 27.8 +/- 1.8 ng/liter; grade 2: 33.2 +/- 2.7 ng/liter; grade 3A: 54.6 +/- 6.5 ng/liter; grade 3B and 4: 105.4 +/- 53.7 ng/liter; p < 0.001 for grades 3 and 4 vs. grades 0 and 1). The proportion of positive samples also increased in parallel with rejection severity, reaching 100% in rejections of grade 3B and 4. Sensitivity and specificity for the detection of significant graft rejection (ISHLT grade 3/4) were 80.4% and 61.8%, respectively. The negative predictive value was most remarkable with 96.2%. Intraindividual longitudinal analysis of troponin T levels and biopsy results in 15 patients during long-term follow-up confirmed these findings. CONCLUSIONS The present data demonstrate that acute allograft rejection after human heart transplantation is often associated with increased serum concentrations of troponin T. All cases of serious forms of graft rejection would have been detected before the development of clinical symptoms. Measurement of troponin T levels may become a useful ancillary parameter for noninvasive rejection diagnosis, being most valuable in the exclusion of severe cardiac graft rejection.


Genome Research | 2008

HBEGF, SRA1, and IK: Three cosegregating genes as determinants of cardiomyopathy

Frauke Friedrichs; Christian Zugck; Gerd-Jörg Rauch; Boris Ivandic; Dieter Weichenhan; Margit Müller-Bardorff; Benjamin Meder; Nour Eddine El Mokhtari; Vera Regitz-Zagrosek; Roland Hetzer; Arne Schäfer; Stefan Schreiber; Jian Chen; Isaac M. Neuhaus; Ruiru Ji; Nathan O. Siemers; Norbert Frey; Wolfgang Rottbauer; Hugo A. Katus; Monika Stoll

Human dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM), a disorder of the cardiac muscle, causes considerable morbidity and mortality and is one of the major causes of sudden cardiac death. Genetic factors play a role in the etiology and pathogenesis of DCM. Disease-associated genetic variations identified to date have been identified in single families or single sporadic patients and explain a minority of the etiology of DCM. We show that a 600-kb region of linkage disequilibrium (LD) on 5q31.2-3, harboring multiple genes, is associated with cardiomyopathy in three independent Caucasian populations (combined P-value = 0.00087). Functional assessment in zebrafish demonstrates that at least three genes, orthologous to loci in this LD block, HBEGF, IK, and SRA1, result independently in a phenotype of myocardial contractile dysfunction when their expression is reduced with morpholino antisense reagents. Evolutionary analysis across multiple vertebrate genomes suggests that this heart failure-associated LD block emerged by a series of genomic rearrangements across amphibian, avian, and mammalian genomes and is maintained as a cluster in mammals. Taken together, these observations challenge the simple notion that disease phenotypes can be traced to altered function of a single locus within a haplotype and suggest that a more detailed assessment of causality can be necessary.


The Cardiology | 2000

Cardiac Troponin T Levels at 96 Hours Reflect Myocardial Infarct Size: A Pathoanatomical Study

Andrew Remppis; Philipp Ehlermann; Evangelos Giannitsis; Tobias Greten; Patrick Most; Margit Müller-Bardorff; Hugo A. Katus

We determined the utility of single-point measurements of circulating cardiac troponin T (cTnT) for the noninvasive estimation of infarct size in 16 beagle dogs after left anterior descending artery (LAD) ligation. Pathoanatomical infarct sizes were determined by the triphenyltetrazolium chloride method and correlated with serum concentration changes of cTnT. Peak cTnT levels (14.10 ± 4.71 μg/l) were reached after 110 ± 21 h. A significant correlation was found between peak cTnT levels (p = 0.0001, r = 0.83) or cumulative cTnT levels and relative infarct size (p = 0.0010, r = 0.72). A single cTnT measurement 96 h after LAD ligation was equally predictive of infarct size (p = 0.0010, r = 0.74) as peak or cumulative cTnT levels derived from serial sampling. cTnT levels at 96 h may thus be useful for practical and cost-effective estimation of infarct size.


Circulation | 2000

Risk Stratification in Patients With Inferior Acute Myocardial Infarction Treated by Percutaneous Coronary Interventions The Role of Admission Troponin T

Evangelos Giannitsis; Stephanie Lehrke; Uwe K.H. Wiegand; Volkhard Kurowski; Margit Müller-Bardorff; Britta Weidtmann; Gert Richardt; Hugo A. Katus

BackgroundCardiac troponin T (cTnT) elevations on admission indicate a high-risk subgroup of patients with ST-segment elevation acute myocardial infarction (AMI). This finding has been attributed to less effective reperfusion after thrombolytic therapy. The aim of this study was to determine the role of admission cTnT on the efficacy of percutaneous coronary interventions (PCIs) in inferior AMI. Methods and ResultsOne hundred fifty-nine consecutive patients with inferior ST-segment AMI were enrolled and followed up for a mean of 448 days. Patients were stratified by cTnT on admission. A cTnT ≥0.1 &mgr;g/L was found in 58% of patients. These patients had longer time intervals from onset of symptoms to therapy (P <0.001) and higher 30-day (10.8% versus 1.5%, P =0.027) and long-term (17.2% versus 4.5%, P =0.023) cardiac mortalities. Rates of the combined end point of death, nonfatal reinfarction, and need for repeated target vessel revascularization procedures were not different in cTnT groups (log rank, 0.69;P =0.41). PCI was attempted in 93.3% of cTnT-positive and 98.5% cTnT-negative patients (P =0.24) but was less frequently successful in patients with cTnT ≥0.1 &mgr;g/L (77.9% versus 96.9%, P <0.001). Coronary stenting reduced 30-day and long-term cardiac mortality, particularly among cTnT-positive patients. In a multivariate analysis, cTnT indicated an ≈5-fold-higher risk (adjusted OR, 4.6; 95% CI, 0.79 to 27.11;P =0.089) and was a strong albeit not independent risk predictor. ConclusionsIn inferior AMI, a positive admission cTnT is associated with lower success rates of direct PCI and higher rates of cardiac events over the short and long term. These patients benefit from coronary stenting.


Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine | 2000

Evaluation of a point-of-care system for quantitative determination of troponin T and myoglobin.

Margit Müller-Bardorff; Christer Sylvén; Gundars Rasmanis; Bo Jørgensen; Paul O. Collinson; Ulla Waldenhofer; Michael M. Hirschl; Anton N. Laggner; Willie Gerhardt; Gerd Hafner; Irene Labaere; Robert Leinberger; Rainer Zerback; Hugo A. Katus

Abstract We present the results of a multicenter evaluation of a new point-of-care system (Cardiac Reader) for the quantitative determination of cardiac troponin T (CARDIAC T Quantitative test) and myoglobin (CARDIAC M test) in whole blood samples. The Cardiac Reader is a CCD camera that optically reads the immunochemical test strips. The measuring range is 0.1 to 3 μg/l for CARDIAC T Quantitative and 30 to 700 μg/l for CARDIAC M. Both tests are calibrated by the manufacturer. The reaction times of the tests are 12 or 8 minutes, respectively. Method comparisons were performed with 281 heparinized blood samples from patients with suspected acute coronary syndromes. The results obtained with CARDIAC T Quantitative showed a good agreement compared with cardiac troponin T ELISA (r = 0.89; y = 0.93x + 0.02). The method comparison between CARDIAC M and Tina-quant Myoglobin also showed a good agreement between both assays (r = 0.98; y = 0.92x + 1.6). Test lot-to-lot comparisons yielded differences of 2% and 6% for CARDIACT Quantitative and of 0 to 11% for CARDIACM. The within-run imprecision with blood samples and control materials was acceptable for CARDIAC T Quantitative (CV 10 to 15%) and good for CARDIAC M (CV 5 to 10%). The between-instrument CV was below 7% for CARDIACT Quantitative and below 5% for CARDIACM. The cross-reactivity of CARDIAC T Quantitative with skeletal troponin T was approximately 0.003%. No significant analytical interference was detected for any of the assays in investigations with biotin (up to 100 μg/l), hemoglobin (up to 0.125 mmol/l), hematocrit (26 to 52%), bilirubin (up to 340 μmol/l), triglycerides (up to 5.0 mmol/l), and 18 standard drugs. With the Cardiac Reader reliable quantitative results can be easily obtained for both cardiac markers. The system is, therefore, particularly suitable for use in emergency rooms, coronary care units and small hospitals.


American Journal of Cardiology | 2000

Diagnostic and Prognostic Role of Myoglobin in Patients With Suspected Acute Coronary Syndrome

Thomas Störk; Alan H.B. Wu; Margit Müller-Bardorff; Ragnar Gareis; Reinhold Muller; Vinzenz Hombach; Hugo A. Katus; Martin Möckel

diagnostic efficiency of cardiac troponin I and troponin T for acute myocardial infarction. Acad Emerg Med 1997;4:13–21. 15. Zimmerman J, Fromm R, Meyer D, Boudreaux A, Wun CC, Smalling R, Davis R, Habib G, Roberts R. Diagnostic markers cooperative study for the diagnosis of myocardial infarction. Circulation 1999;99:1671–1677. 16. Panteghini M, Apple FS, Christenson RH, Dati F, Mair J, Wu AH. Proposals from IFCC committee on standardization of markers of cardiac damage (C-SMCD): recommendations on use of biochemical markers of cardiac damage in acute coronary syndromes. Scan J Clin Lab Invest 1999; 59(suppl 230):103–112. 17. Hamm CW, Goldmann BU, Heeschen C, Kreymann G, Berger J, Meinertz T. Emergency room triage of patients with acute chest pain by means of rapid testing for cardiac troponin T or troponin I. N Engl J Med 1997;337:1648–1653.


Clinica Chimica Acta | 2001

Recalibration of the point-of-care test for CARDIAC T Quantitative with Elecsys Troponin T 3rd generation

Paul O. Collinson; Bo Jørgensen; Christer Sylvén; Markus Haass; Frank Chwallek; Hugo A. Katus; Margit Müller-Bardorff; Ulla Derhaschnig; Michael M. Hirschl; Rainer Zerback

The rapid troponin T assay CARDIAC T Quantitative was recalibrated using Elecsys Troponin T 3rd Generation as a new reference method. This paper presents the method comparisons at six centres using the new reference method. Method comparison between CARDIAC T Quantitative versus Elecsys Troponin T 3rd Generation were performed using 319 samples from patients with acute coronary syndromes. The quality of the CARDIAC T Quantitative was controlled by a daily single determination of CARDIAC Control Troponin T, and for the Elecsys Troponin T 3rd Generation, the Elecsys controls were included in each run. The results for the control materials for the CARDIAC T Quantitative were between 93% and 107% of the target values. The CV ranged from 7% to 16%. From the regression analysis, according to Bablok and Passing (y=1.07x) and the Bland and Altman plot, the bias between CARDIAC T Quantitative and Elecsys Troponin T 3rd Generation is from +6% to +7%. The correlation coefficient is 0.93, and a 3x3 comparison of the clinical efficiency yielded 92% clinical concordance between CARDIAC T Quantitative and Elecsys Troponin T 3rd Generation. In conclusion, CARDIAC T Quantitative was in good agreement with the reference and calibration method Elecsys Troponin T 3rd Generation.


Archives of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine | 2000

Analytical and clinical performance of an improved qualitative troponin T rapid test in laboratories and critical care units

Michael M. Hirschl; Harald Herkner; Anton N. Laggner; Christer Sylvén; Gundars Rasmanis; Paul O. Collinson; Willie Gerhardt; Robert Leinberger; Rainer Zerback; Margit Müller-Bardorff; Hugo A. Katus

OBJECTIVE To evaluate the performance of a visual troponin T rapid test in the hands of nontraditionally trained personnel of 2 critical care units in comparison to 3 laboratories. METHODS Method comparisons of the troponin T rapid test versus cardiac troponin T enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay were performed with 804 samples from 510 patients with suspected acute coronary syndromes. Cross-reactivity with skeletal troponin T was studied up to 5000 microg/L. RESULTS Laboratories and critical care units obtained comparable results in the analytical cutoff of the test (0.11 and 0. 10 microg/L) and in the diagnostic sensitivities in the detection of acute myocardial infarction (96% and 93% after 8 hours) and of high-risk patients with unstable angina pectoris (100% and 100%). Different percentages of false-positive results (0.2% and 3%) were found, which may reflect different objectives and strategies in these hospital units. The cross-reactivity with skeletal troponin T was less than 0.01%. CONCLUSIONS The troponin T rapid test gives reliable results not only when used by laboratory personnel experienced in the execution of analytical methods, but also in the hands of nurses and physicians working in clinical units outside the laboratory.

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Evangelos Giannitsis

University Hospital Heidelberg

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