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Listening to this month's EMRAP and was pleasantly surprised to hear them discuss the new high sensitivity troponins. What are you doing with these patients who have elevated troponins but are either low risk or aren't slam dunk ACS?
With the previous method, a high troponin was >0.08, and anything above that was NSTEMI/STEMI type I or II and required admission for further eval. The new "elevated troponin", though, is 10-15 with Acute MI being >100. This 15-99 grey area that leads to a lot of discussion with inpatient docs. "Well, that patient doesn't have chest pain, so it can't be ACS, they don't need admission". What's your practice?
With the previous method, a high troponin was >0.08, and anything above that was NSTEMI/STEMI type I or II and required admission for further eval. The new "elevated troponin", though, is 10-15 with Acute MI being >100. This 15-99 grey area that leads to a lot of discussion with inpatient docs. "Well, that patient doesn't have chest pain, so it can't be ACS, they don't need admission". What's your practice?