Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:2.3.1.109 (AST)
6,066 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A polymethylmethacrylate total artificial heart (kinetic components made of polyetherurethane) of TNS Brno II type was implanted into seven calves (2-5 months of age) surviving for the average of 152.4 +/- 19.1 days after the implantation. During the entire post-operative period the animals received oral warfarin-sodium, acetylsalicylic acid, dipyridamole and alpha-tocopherol. Blood was taken for biochemical and hematological examinations twice a week from the jugular vein. During the experiments there were decreases in the number of red blood cells, hematocrit and hemoglobin levels. Plasma free hemoglobin and serum enzymes (alkaline phosphatase, AST, ALT, LDH) increased. Coagulation tests were abnormal because anticoagulation therapy was used. There were minimal changes in the number of white blood cells and platelets, fibrinogen, blood pH, blood glucose, serum electrolytes, bilirubin (total and direct), creatinine, blood urea, and lactate. Possible reasons for observed changes include the gradual rise in the central venous pressure and damaged function of the liver parenchyma. Other factors playing a possible role in inducing changes in laboratory findings are also discussed.
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PMID:Hematological and biochemical studies in calves living over 100 days with the polymethylmethacrylate total artificial heart TNS Brno II. 395 54

Selenium deficiency has been implicated as a cause of hepatic injury, possibly from accentuated lipoperoxidation due to decreased activity of the selenoenzyme, glutathione peroxidase. Because of possible clinical and biochemical links between selenium and alcohol, we performed nutritional assessment and assayed red blood cell, plasma, and whole blood selenium by spectrofluorometry in 27 normals (group I), 30 asymptomatic alcoholics on admission to a detoxification unit, (group II) and 16 alcoholics with severe liver disease (group III). We found a mean (+/- SD) whole blood selenium of 0.109 micrograms/ml +/- 0.014 for group I vs 0.076 +/- 0.010 for group II (P less than 0.001), and 0.047 +/- 0.006 for group III (P less than 0.001 vs group I and II). For plasma, the mean (+/- SD) selenium was 0.095 micrograms/ml +/- 0.016 for group I versus 0.065 micrograms/ml +/- 0.012 in group II and 0.038 micrograms/ml +/- 0.007 in group III (All P less than 0.001). Calculated red blood selenium levels were also significantly reduced in alcoholics versus controls. Whole blood and plasma selenium correlated directly with serum albumin. For whole blood selenium versus albumin, r = 0.73 (P less than 0.01), and for plasma selenium versus albumin, r = 0.71 (P less than 0.01). A significant inverse correlation was noted between whole blood selenium and the height of the total serum bilirubin (r = -0.46), alkaline phosphatase (r = -0.50), and AST (r = -0.51) (P less than 0.01 for all). Among alcoholics admitted for detoxification, selenium was diminished despite the absence of severe malnutrition, as determined by standard nutrition assessment parameters.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Low blood selenium levels in alcoholics with and without advanced liver disease. Correlations with clinical and nutritional status. 402 13

Twenty-two non-lactating dairy cattle from a sentinel herd previously described (St. George, 1985) were monitored daily during an outbreak of ephemeral fever. Nine developed clinical ephemeral fever between 25 December 1981 and 30 January 1982. There were no subclinical infections with bovine ephemeral fever virus in the group. There were, however, subclinical infections with CSIRO Village, Akabane, Aino, Tinaroo and Kimberley viruses as described by St. George et al. (1984). Six of the nine affected cattle showed a neutrophilia with a concurrent lymphopaenia on the day of pyrexia; however, the differential white cell profile had begun to change up to 24 h prior to leucocytosis. Serum carboxypeptidase values fell by 24 h following the febrile response. Plasma fibrinogen rose rapidly in all six cows. The peak concentration (15.6 +/- 2.70 g l-1) occurred 3 days after pyrexia with the highest individual increase being from 6.05 to 19.6 g l-1. Plasma fibrinogen levels remained elevated for at least 7 days. Serum calcium fell significantly during Day 1 of the disease, the mean decline being 0.22 +/- 0.08 mmol l-1. The greatest individual fall was from 2.33 to 1.92 mmol l-1. None of the affected cattle showed any compensatory change in serum magnesium. There was no change in the normal values of creatinine, urea, gamma-GT, AST and alkaline phosphatase. Bovine ephemeral fever virus was isolated from only four of the six cases, whereas specific antibody was detected in all cattle 3-4 days after recovery.
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PMID:Studies on the pathogenesis of bovine ephemeral fever in sentinel cattle. II. Haematological and biochemical data. 409 98

Serum alkaline phosphatase (ALP), gamma-glutamyl transferase (GGT), 5'nucleotidase (5'NT), sorbitol dehydrogenase (SDH), and aspartate transaminase activities were measured in 10 clinically healthy foals, 10 yearlings, and 10 two-year-old Quarter Horses. Enzyme activities in foals at 0.5 to 3 days, 2 to 3 weeks, and 5 to 7 weeks of age were compared with enzyme activities from yearling and 2-year-old horses. Multivariate analyses of variance revealed significantly higher enzyme values in foals (P less than 0.002). This increase was mainly a result of higher ALP and GGT activities, with lesser effects due to higher SDH and 5'NT activities. Standard deviations for ALP and GGT were also larger in foals than in adult horses. The wide variation of ALP and GGT activities may limit their usefulness in the diagnosis of hepatic disease in foals. Standard deviations for serum AST, SDH, and 5'NT activities were smaller. These enzymes may be indicators of hepatobiliary disease in foals. The high serum enzyme activities in healthy foals may reflect a physiologic difference between foals and adult horses. Relative hepatic mass (as a percentage of body weight) and enzyme activity per gram of hepatic tissue are high in young animals, indicating that the high serum enzyme activities in foals are due partly to a high rate of enzyme production and release.
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PMID:Effect of age on liver enzyme activities in serum of healthy quarter horses. 614 23

Activities of alpha-hydroxybutyrate- and lactate dehydrogenases (HBDH, LDH), aspartate- and alanine aminotransferases (AST, ALT), alkaline phosphatase, alpha-amylase as well as content of total proteins, glucose, cholesterol, triglycerides and Ca2+ were estimated sprectrophotometrically in blood serum of rat males within 2 hrs after thermic burns of the III degree involving 15% the body surface. The burns caused about 2-fold increase in activities of LDH, HBDH and AST and in content of triglycerides in blood serum but did not affect the other biochemical patterns. Adrenalectomy, carried out within 3 days before the burns, accelerated and pseudoadrenalectomy decreased the early postburn enzymatic activation. Preadministration of reserpine, phentolamine and obsidane (propranolol) decreased distinctly the hyperenzymic reaction observed after the burn stress.
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PMID:[Effect of adrenalectomy and anti-adrenergic preparations on the development of hyperenzymic and biochemical changes in the blood in burns]. 620 53

Twenty mares were assigned to 1 of 4 groups: no altrenogest; altrenogest at 0.044 mg/kg BW; altrenogest at 0.132 mg/kg BW; or altrenogest at 0.220 mg/kg BW. Treatment was administered daily for 86 days. No signs of illness attributable to feeding altrenogest were observed during the trial. Treatment had no effect (P greater than .05) on the following parameters: WBC, differential WBC, platelet number, creatinine, LDH, CPK, total bilirubin, cholesterol, globulin, BSP, and erythrocyte sedimentation rate. When comparing values over time with pretreatment means or among treatment groups, there were differences (P less than .05) in RBC, PCV, Hb, ALT, PT, PTT, P, Na, TP, BUN, Cl and glucose. However, these changes remained within established normal ranges and also occurred in mares in the control group. There was no treatment by time interaction for any of these parameters. Treatment differences (P less than .05) were observed for K, Ca, alkaline phosphatase and AST during the course of the trial. However, only occasional values of these parameters were outside the established ranges. They were only slightly elevated and tended to be either sporadic or also occurred in control mares. Few of the observed changes could be attributed to the feeding of altrenogest.
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PMID:The effect of altrenogest, an oral progestin, on hematologic and biochemical parameters in mares. 668 30

Dynamic examinations of the activity of glutamate-aspartate and glutamate-alanine aminotransferases (AST, ALT), fructose diphosphate aldolase and alkaline phosphatase in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) were carried out in 512 patients (14 groups) suffering from viral and bacterial meningitis in the acute period, as well as in reconvalescents. The activity of the CSF enzymes was also determined in 70 healthy subjects. It was found that in the acute period of meningitis the activity of the CSF enzymes (mostly of the aminotransferases) rose, this rise being greater in meningococcal and tuberculous meningitis than in the viral one. In reconvalescents the activity of the aminotransferases dropped, and that of aldolase and alkaline phosphatase got normal. The activity of the blood serum enzymes showed no substantial changes. The differences in the activity of the enzymes may serve as a criterion for diagnostic differentiation of meningitis.
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PMID:[Serum and cerebrospinal fluid enzyme spectra in meningitis and their differential diagnostic value]. 707 18

Examination of 19 serum biochemical and hematologic parameters in a group of white male runners, ranging in age from 23 to 47 years, just prior to and immediately after a 13-mile "mini-marathon," demonstrated a significant increase, by paired Student t-test, in mean values of: K+, BUN, creatinine, CK, LDH, AST (SGOT), alkaline phosphatase, bilirubin, uric acid and leukocyte counts. Prevailing environmental conditions were such as to produce no significant hemoconcentration. Using this group's statistics and this hospital laboratory's upper limits of normal, the percentage of values above two SDs are, for the resting state: K+ 7%, BUN 7%, creatinine 0%, CK 21%, LDH 21%, AST 0%, alkaline phosphatase 0%, bilirubin 7%, uric acid 7%, and leukocyte count 0%. Post-exertional values above normal limits are: K+ 7%, BUN 21%, creatinine 21%, CK 93%, LDH 86%, AST 0%, alkaline phosphatase 0%, bilirubin 14%, uric acid 36%, and leukocyte 71%. Consequently, abnormally high values for K+, BUN, creatinine, CK, LDH, bilirubin, uric acid, and leukocyte counts can often be expected in some patients who exercise heavily. The degree of the abnormality will depend on the level and length of exercise as well as the elapsed time between exercise and testing.
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PMID:Exercise-induced changes in common laboratory tests. 707 33

The increasing concern of industrialized societies over the potential health hazard of synthetic chemicals in the occupational environment has led to government requirements for medical laboratory screening of workers. The specific tests for such screening programs are most often selected on the basis of medical experience which utilized them in symptomatic or hospitalized populations. Required screening tests for hepatic injury including cancer in vinyl chloride workers has been systematically and prospectively studied in an industrial population working with synthetic rubber and plastics. Approximately 1300 employees were studied over a five-year period. A cohort of 969 male employees, for the purposes of analysis, were divided into a "standard" and "nonstandard" population based upon the absence or presence of significant medical disease (including liver disease). A subcohort of 120 individuals was further identified based on availabiliity of liver biopsy. Evaluation of federally required studies included alkaline phosphatase (AP), gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (GGTP), alanine aminotranserase (ALT, SGPT), aspartic aminotransferase (AST, SGOT) and bilirubin (BR). Also studied were indocyanine green clearance (ICG) and radioisotopic liver spleen scans (L-S scans). The GGTP provided the highest positive predicted value as a screening test for identifying "nonstandard" individuals (individuals with all types of medical disease) followed by ICG, AST, ALT, L-S scan, AP, and BR. In the identification of asymptomatic liver disease the GGTP had the least specificity due to a high false positive rate, while the AP provided the highest specificity. The ICG clearance however, provided the best combination of positive predictive value and sum of specificity and sensitivity. The AP provided additional increase in specificity as a follow-up study. There was no evidence that any of the other federally required tests added any additional benefit and did add significant increase in the false positive rate. These studies support the need for evaluating screening tests as to their sensitivity, specificity and positive predictive value, in asymptomatic individuals, before they are made established requirements.
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PMID:Effectiveness of federally required medical laboratory screening in the detection of chemical liver injury. 733 29

We examined data from the participants in the Lipid Research Clinics Program Prevalence Study for associations between high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol and clinical chemistry tests. There is a negative relationship between serum thyroxine and HDL cholesterol: men 20-69 years and women 20-44 years with low thyroxine levels have significantly higher HDL cholesterol than those with high thyroxine levels. Women 45-69 years with hyperglobulinemia (> 3.2 g/dl) have significantly lower HDL cholesterol levels than those with lower globulin levels. There is a weak negative association between HDL cholesterol and serum uric acid in men 20-44 years and a stronger association in women. A weak negative association between HDL cholesterol and plasma glucose is present only in men 20-44 years and women 45-69 years. Subjects with high serum bilirubin or serum aspartate aminotransferase (AST, SGOT) values have higher HDL cholesterol levels that are statistically significant in men 20-69 years and women 20-44 years (bilirubin) and men 45-69 years and women 45-69 years (AST). There is a negative association between alkaline phosphatase and HDL cholesterol in women and young men. These results suggest that thyroid hormones may be involved in the regulation of HDL cholesterol, and that there are associations between HDL cholesterol and the clinical chemistry tests that are not necessarily explained by disease. However, in the whole population, the plasma constituents measured as clinical chemistry tests, or the mechanisms that regulate their levels, are not important determinants of plasma HDL cholesterol levels.
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PMID:Associations of plasma high-density lipoprotein cholesterol with clinical chemistry data. 741 42


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