C-reactive protein: a critical update
University College London · The Royal Free Hospital
Abstract
In the mid 1990s, immunoassays for C-reactive protein (CRP), with greater sensitivity than those previously in routine use, revealed that increased CRP values, even within the range previously considered normal, strongly predict future coronary events. These findings triggered widespread interest, especially, remarkably, in the US, where the clinical use of CRP measurement had been largely ignored for about 30 years. CRP production is part of the nonspecific acute-phase response to most forms of inflammation, infection, and tissue damage and was therefore considered not to provide clinically useful information. Indeed, CRP values can never be diagnostic on their own and can only be interpreted at the bedside,…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 53.50
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 62
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Acute-phase protein
- C-reactive protein
- Medicine
- Disease
- Intensive care medicine
- Inflammation
- Clinical significance
- Immunology