Does delivery mode (labor vs. cesarean section) influence the peripartum dynamics of ischemia and heart failure biomarkers in pregnant women?
Mode of delivery influences physiological fluctuations of cardiac biomarkers postpartum, with labor associated with slight increases in ischemic markers and cesarean section with NT-Pro-BNP, though neither indicates clinically meaningful myometrial or myocardial damage.
BACKGROUND: The uterus and its myometrium undergo several changes during delivery. In labor, the myometrium performs contractions to expel the newborn. In a cesarean section, however, the myometrium is incised. Little is known about labor-induced changes in biomarkers that are known to rise during injuries and exhaustion of another muscle, the heart. These markers can also be produced by the myometrium, especially damaged myometrium. Since labor is known to cause slight myocardial challenge, physiological changes in cardiac biomarkers in the context of labor versus after an incision of the uterus are of new interest. Here, we question whether cardiac biomarkers could also be produced by the uterus. If this were the case, the interpretation of the myocardial ischemic marker peripartum needed a revision. This study investigated whether cardiac biomarkers might be influenced by uterine activity or injuries from cesarean sections. METHODS: = 20). RESULTS: Our findings indicate that ischemia biomarkers (hs-cTnT, CK and CK-MB) increase more during the postpartum period than they do after a cesarean section, whereas NT-Pro-BNP levels increase after cesarean section. These elevations remained within normal ranges and were not associated with clinical symptoms. CONCLUSION: Biomarker levels differ based on delivery mode, indicating that mode of birth influences biomarker fluctuations postpartum within a physiological range. The incision of the uterus does not reveal higher marker levels than contractions do; therefore, this kind of myometrial damage is not associated with an increase in ischemic biomarkers. The observed elevations are linked to slight myocardial damage in the peripartum phase after labor, comparable to exercise. The myometrium does not appear to provide evidence for a clinically meaningful contribution based on peripheral measurements of highly sensitive troponin, CK and CKMB.
Tabikh et al. (Sun,) studied this question.