Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:2.6.1.1 (
aspartate aminotransferase
)
21,665
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Gingival crevicular fluid samples were collected from 296 teeth from 40 subjects, including 19 rapidly progressive periodontitis (RPP), 8 chronic adult periodontitis (CAP), 7 marginal
gingivitis
(MG) and 6 healthy subjects (H). The activities of
aspartate aminotransferase
(
AST
) in each sample were tested. The results were as follows: (1) The two groups with destructive periodontal disease (RPP and CAP) had greater GCF-
AST
levels than that from the two non-destructive groups (MG and H). (2) The GCF-
AST
activities showed significant positive correlations with clinical periodontal parameters, such as probing depth, attachment loss, bleeding index and suppuration. (3) Four weeks after thorough full-mouth root planing, both clinical parameters and GCF-
AST
levels decreased significantly. The present study suggests that GCF-
AST
activity might be a sensitive and objective marker for detection of periodontal tissue destruction and inflammation.
...
PMID:[Gingival crevicular aspartate aminotransferase levels in periodontitis patients before and after periodontal treatment]. 128 91
Previous studies have shown that
aspartate aminotransferase
(
AST
), an established serum marker for cardiac and liver damage in humans, appears in elevated concentrations in samples of gingival crevicular fluid (GCF) from ligated vs. non-ligated teeth in beagle dogs and in elevated quantities in cross-sectional GCF sampling, adjusted for collection time, from human sites with clinical signs of past or present periodontal disease as compared to healthy sites. This paper describes a longitudinal study in which
AST
was monitored quarterly over a 2-year period at 2 sites/tooth in 31 patients with mild to moderate adult periodontitis. In this study sample, 40 (2.6%) of 1536 sites exhibited confirmed loss of at least 2 mm of attachment during the 2-yr observation period. In comparison with healthy sites within the same patients,
AST
standardized to a 30-second collection interval (AST30) was elevated at these sites with new confirmed attachment loss, and at sites with past attachment loss or
gingivitis
in the absence of periodontitis. When both within- and between-patient variation were taken into account, observed odds-ratios associating enzyme with disease were higher for sites with new attachment loss (9-16 depending on test cut-point) than for sites with pre-study attachment loss (3-12), or
gingivitis
in the absence of periodontitis (5-8).
AST
in GCF is strongly related to human periodontal disease. The data are consistent with the hypothesis that the relationship is strongest during episodes of cumulative tissue breakdown, but the small numbers of sites with confirmed attachment loss during the study period, or with
gingivitis
in the absence of periodontitis, means that further clinical studies are necessary to clarify this issue.
...
PMID:A longitudinal study of aspartate aminotransferase in human gingival crevicular fluid. 182 27
Previous investigations have shown a clear association between the presence of the enzyme
aspartate aminotransferase
(
AST
) in gingival crevicular fluid (GCF) and clinical evidence of periodontal disease in humans, as well as in the beagle dog model. This paper describes a 26-week study that uses the beagle dog model of ligature-induced periodontitis in which GCF-
AST
(corrected for collection time) was correlated with microscopic evidence of tissue destruction in the periodontium at the sites of fluid collection. GCF and clinical data were collected at baseline, at optimal gingival health, during
gingivitis
, and after ligation. A cross-mouth design was implemented so that six premolar teeth in each dog were ligated for periods up to five weeks. Formalin-fixed tissues from the sites of GCF collection were prepared for light microscopy and evaluated for the presence of epithelial ulceration, bone resorption, and inflammatory cell infiltration. The relationship between GCF-
AST
levels and microscopic findings was analyzed by calculation of sensitivity and specificity and by plots of Receiver Operating Characteristics. These data revealed a correlation between elevated enzyme concentration and microscopic evidence of disease activity. Taken together with human studies, these results provide support for the use of
AST
as a marker of periodontal disease progression.
...
PMID:Association of gingival crevicular fluid aspartate aminotransferase levels with histopathology during ligature-induced periodontitis in the beagle dog. 204 80
Data from several sources demonstrate that disease-active and disease-inactive periodontal pockets exist, but currently available diagnostic procedures do not permit identification of disease-active sites at any given point in time. Using the experimental
gingivitis
model, we have performed studies aimed at determining whether levels of the enzyme
aspartate aminotransferase
(
AST
) in gingival crevicular fluid correlate with the presence and extent of periodontal inflammation. Gingival inflammation was assessed using the Gingival Index and the Sulcular Bleeding Index, and enzyme activity was measured using a standard procedure. Our data reveal a statistically significant association between
AST
values and Gingival Index scores for spontaneously occurring lesions (p less than 0.02-0.04) and experimentally induced lesions (p less than 0.0001), as well as the extent of change in these values during developing experimental
gingivitis
(p less than 0.0001) and resolving experimental
gingivitis
(p less than 0.0001). The data demonstrate that
AST
levels can be used to assess the presence and extent of periodontal inflammation.
...
PMID:Relationship between levels of aspartate aminotransferase in gingival crevicular fluid and gingival inflammation. 213 68
It is becoming increasingly apparent that the traditional clinical criteria are inadequate for: determining active disease sites in periodontitis, monitoring quantitatively the response to therapy or measuring the degree of susceptibility to future breakdown. In an attempt to develop objective measures, a wide variety of studies have been undertaken using saliva, blood, plaque and gingival crevicular fluid (GCF) as the specimen source. Examination has included: specific bacteria and their products; host cells and their products (enzymatic and antibacterial, both immunologic and non-immunologic); products of tissue injury derived from local epithelial and connective tissues and bone. Although most of the work to date has failed to provide reliable aids to the clinician, refinements in techniques for sampling and the availability of more sophisticated analytic techniques give cause for optimism. Methods proposed for detection of disease-associated bacteria in subgingival plaque vary in their sensitivity and specificity. Dark field microscopy shows some correlation with existing disease; however, the limited specificity of this method imposes severe restrictions on its usefulness. Highly specific polyclonal and monoclonal antisera to suspected pathogens Bacteroides gingivalis and Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans have been developed and improved methods of identification of these microbes in plaque by ELISA immunofluorescence and flow cytometry are under development. With respect to the host response, a strong correlation between antibody patterns to specific bacteria and periodontal disease categories appears to be emerging. Although most studies have focused on serum antibody derived from peripheral blood, a shift to detection of local antibody response appears to be likely. Techniques of measurement that are exquisitely sensitive have been developed for detection of major immune recognition proteins such as antibody and complement in crevicular fluid. Research efforts attempting to correlate local antibody response to local disease activity are underway. Measurement of GCF flow rate, endotoxin, H2S, butyrate and a variety of enzymes (e.g., collagenase, arylsulfatase, B-glucuronidase) show good correlation with levels of
gingivitis
. In periodontitis, the most promising markers of tissue breakdown are prostaglandins of the E series, the enzymes collagenase and
aspartate aminotransferase
, sulfated glycosaminoglycans, osteoclastic activating factor and bone resorptive capacity of crevicular cells. Assay of the migration of crevicular leucocytes in vivo can serve as an indicator of a defect in host resistance.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Indicators of periodontal disease activity: an evaluation. 352 56
Gingival crevicular fluid (GCF) is an inflammatory exudate that can be collected at the gingival margin or within the gingival crevice. The biochemical analysis of the fluid offers a noninvasive means of assessing the host response in periodontal disease. In recent years, the relationship of measures of the inflammatory response in GCF to risk for development of active periodontal disease (defined as clinical attachment loss or radiographic bone loss) has been studied in longitudinal trials. The greatest interest has focused on prostaglandin E2, an arachidonic acid metabolite; beta-glucuronidase and neutrophil elastase, markers of lysosomal enzyme release from neutrophils; and
aspartate aminotransferase
, a cytoplasmic enzyme indicative of cellular necrosis. Analysis of the data allows a number of conclusions to be drawn concerning the potential diagnostic significance of GCF: 1) an exuberant host inflammatory response is associated with progressive disease in patients with periodontitis; 2) collection of GCF using small precut strips is a reproducible and reliable collection technique; 3) the total amount of the mediator and not concentration of the mediator in the GCF sample can be reported when timed samples are collected; and 4) technology exists for GCF-based diagnostic tests to be performed in the dental office. Nevertheless, many questions remain. Still to be determined are: 1) the relationship of test results to the development of periodontitis in patients with
gingivitis
; 2) the level of test accuracy needed to justify use of these tests; 3) the unit of observation (patient, site) that is being evaluated by the test; and 4) the need for such tests as perceived by clinicians. While these questions are formidable, introduction of GCF-based diagnostic tests will provide clinicians with an improved, quantitative means of evaluating patients and offer specific criteria to assess the effectiveness of treatment.
...
PMID:Evaluation of components of gingival crevicular fluid as diagnostic tests. 915 49
The aim of this cross-sectional study was to investigate the clinical application of chairside tests for gingival crevicular fluid (GCF)
aspartate aminotransferase
(
AST
) levels and plaque BANA hydrolysis activity with the presence of the periodontal pathogens Porphyromonas gingivalis and Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans. The study comprised 100 periodontitis sites (pocket depths > or =4 mm, GI=3) from 10 patients with chronic adult periodontitis and 100 control sites (pocket depths <4 mm, GI<3) from 10 periodontally healthy patients comprising 55 healthy sites (pocket depths <4 mm, GI=0) and 45
gingivitis
sites (pocket depths <4 mm, GI=1 or 2). The values for both BANA hydrolysis and
AST
levels were significantly higher in samples from periodontitis compared with
gingivitis
and healthy sites (p<0.001). A. actinomycetemcomitans was identified in 45% and P. gingivalis in 17% of periodontitis sites but neither pathogen was recovered from control sites and there was no significant correlation with the clinical parameters measured. There was no significant relationship between the presence of P. gingivalis and/or A. actinomycetemcomitans with BANA hydrolysis or
AST
levels. A significant correlation (p=0.0017) was observed between BANA hydrolysis and pocket depth and between
AST
hydrolysis and the GI (p=0.01). This study failed to demonstrate a positive association between chairside analysis of GCF metabolites for
AST
levels and/or BANA hydrolysis with P. gingivalis and A. actinomycetemcomitans. However, the GCF metabolites had a significant correlation with periodontally diseased sites in patients with chronic adult periodontitis and may help confirm clinical observations.
...
PMID:Microbial factors and gingival crevicular fluid aspartate aminotransferase levels. A cross-sectional study. 956 86
A recently reported six-month
gingivitis
study demonstrated that in subjects with
gingivitis
, a triclosan/pyrophosphate dentifrice provided supragingival plaque control. The level of plaque reduction was comparable with that reported for other triclosan-containing dentifrices; however, no reductions in
gingivitis
were observed for triclosan/pyrophosphate relative to the negative control. One possible explanation of this result is that the Hawthorne effect in the study was too great to allow the detection of a treatment benefit for the triclosan product. In order to further explore the relevance of these results, three independent clinical studies were undertaken utilizing designs based on a 21-day experimental
gingivitis
model in which Hawthorne effects are minimized, in part due to the absence of toothbrushing. In each model, a pre-study prophylaxis was followed by a three-week period of oral hygiene instruction to establish optimum baseline gingival health in study participants. The studies varied in enrollment; 120, 33 and 32 subjects completed treatment on studies 1, 2, and 3, respectively. In study 1, test articles were dentifrice products (0.28% triclosan/5% pyrophosphate/0.145% sodium fluoride, 0.2% triclosan/0.5% zinc citrate/0.112% sodium fluoride, 0.145% sodium fluoride and 0.15% sodium monofluorophosphate) applied neat and undiluted via a performed tooth shield (that prevents mechanical tooth-brushing at the test sites in the oral cavity) in a partial mouth design. In study 2, test articles were also dentifrice products (0.28% triclosan/5% pyrophosphate/0.243% sodium fluoride, 0.3% triclosan/2% Gantrez copolymer/0.24% sodium fluoride and 0.243% sodium fluoride) but administered to subjects in the form of 1:3 aqueous slurry rinses. Lastly, in study 3, test articles were all mouthrinses (0.12% chlorhexidine, 0.045% triclosan in ethanol plus respective vehicle placebos). Clinical assessments to quantify the test articles' effects on the development of plaque and
gingivitis
were conducted at baseline (studies 1, 2 and 3), day 7 (studies 2 and 3), day 14 (studies 2 and 3) and day 21 (studies 1, 2 and 3). In study 1, no statistically significant treatment effects were observed between the test articles and controls for plaque or
gingivitis
development. In study 2, no statistically significant treatment effects were observed at any time point between test products for the development of
gingivitis
. At days 7 and 14, there were no significant differences between test products and control for plaque development as well. At day 21, the group rinsing with the triclosan/pyrophosphate/sodium fluoride slurry had significantly less plaque accumulation than the group rinsing with the triclosan/copolymer/sodium fluoride slurry (p < 0.05); however, neither of the groups using test products containing triclosan was significantly different for plaque development from the group using the sodium fluoride control test article. In addition,
aspartate aminotransferase
activity in gingival crevicular fluid was assayed at days 0 and 21; no between-group differences were found at either of these time points, though day 21
AST
activities were higher than those at baseline. In study 3, statistically significant treatment differences in plaque regrowth and
gingivitis
were observed at day 21 for the chlorhexidine rinse versus all other rinses (p < 0.05). No other statistically significant treatment effects were observed between test compounds at any other time points. The results benchmark the anti-plaque and anti-
gingivitis
benefit for a range of triclosan-based product forms against positive and negative controls in a three different experimental
gingivitis
models, a design considered predictive of clinical efficacy in longer-term investigations. It is concluded that dentifrice products containing triclosan do not possess sufficient antimicrobial activity to suppress plaque and
gingivitis
development in the absence of normal oral hygiene, and that relative to chlorhexidine, triclosan itself offers only modest efficacy for the prevention of plaque accumulation and therefore the delayed onset of
gingivitis
.
...
PMID:Experimental gingivitis studies: effects of triclosan and triclosan-containing dentifrices on dental plaque and gingivitis in three-week randomized controlled clinical trials. 1211 26
Pomegranate components have properties that could promote oral health, including reducing the risk of
gingivitis
. The present study examined young adults (n = 32, split evenly among both genders), for the effects of 4 weeks of thrice daily mouth rinsing with the pomegranate (Punica granatum L.) extract PomElla dissolved in water. This treatment changed salivary measures relevant to oral health including
gingivitis
. The changes were: reduced total protein (which can correlate with plaque forming bacteria readings), reduced activities of
aspartate aminotransferase
(an indicator of cell injury), reduced alpha-glucosidase activity (a sucrose degrading enzyme), increased activities of the antioxidant enzyme ceruloplasmin (which could give better protection against oral oxidant stress) and increased radical scavenging capacity (though this increase was significant only by nonparametric statistical analysis). A placebo of cornstarch in water did not affect these measures. These data raise the possibility of using pomegranate extracts in oral health products such as toothpaste and mouthwashes.
...
PMID:Pomegranate extract mouth rinsing effects on saliva measures relevant to gingivitis risk. 1917 Jan 39
This aim of this study was to evaluate the relationship between the formation of volatile sulfur compounds (VSC) and the severity of different kinds of periodontal disease. Twenty patients suffering from biofilm-related periodontal diseases and a control group of ten healthy individuals were selected. The patients were divided according to their periodontal diagnoses: marginal
gingivitis
(MG/n = 10) and chronic periodontitis (CP/n = 10). The patients received non-surgical therapy that consisted of motivation, scaling and root planing. Two experimental periods were used: T1 = baseline and T2 = final evaluation after three months. The data analysis showed that CP group had a significant reduction (p < 0.05) in probing depth (PD) and clinical attachment level (CAL), and group MG presented a reduction in GI (p < 0.05). There was a significant reduction (p < 0.05) in the
aspartate aminotransferase
(
AST
), N-a-benzoyl-DL-arginine-p-nitroanilide (BAPNA) and VSC levels in both MG and CP groups, although the deeper residual pockets led to higher
AST
and VSC levels in the CP group. Within the limits of the present pilot study, it can be concluded that the non-surgical therapy may influence VSC formation in a manner dependent on periodontal disease severity.
...
PMID:Relationship between the formation of volatile sulfur compounds (VSC) and the severity of the periodontal disease: a pilot study. 2138 49
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