Clinical study of 52 STEMI patients and 42 controls comparing MOTS-c levels between STEMI patients who achieved normal coronary flow (TIMI 3) versus those with no-reflow (TIMI 0-2) after primary PCI, finding that patients with no-reflow had significantly lower MOTS-c levels, identifying MOTS-c deficiency as a potential contributor to microvascular obstruction in STEMI. First clinical evaluation of MOTS-c in coronary no-reflow. Establishes an association between MOTS-c deficiency and coronary no-reflow in STEMI—a potentially life-threatening complication of primary PCI where microvascular dysfunction prevents myocardial reperfusion despite coronary artery patency, suggesting MOTS-c measurement or supplementation as a potential approach to reducing no-reflow incidence.
Çakmak, Tolga; Yaşar, Erdoğan; Çakmak, Esin; Tekin, Suat; Karakuş, Yasin; Türkoğlu, Caner; Yüksel, Furkan