Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:2.6.1.1 (aspartate aminotransferase)
21,665 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Lesions consistent with exertional myopathy (EM) were documented postmortem in four North American river otters (Lutra canadensis) during translocation for a population restoration project. Clinical signs in these otters included depression, anorexia and shock. Gross lesions in one otter included locally extensive linear, pale areas within the subscapularis, rectus abdominis, quadriceps, and dorsal laryngeal muscles. Microscopic lesions were characterized by acute to subacute myofiber necrosis of varying severity, and occurred in a variety of skeletal muscles as well as cardiac muscle in one otter. Based on these observations, we conducted a retrospective review of records of otters which experienced similar capture, transfer, and holding protocols between 1995 and 1997, but with a successful outcome (n = 69). Significant elevations in serum aspartate aminotransferase (AST) and creatine kinase (CK) were observed in 19 (28%) of the otters, but may have been higher due to delayed sample collection from some otters. However, none of the otters with elevated enzymes exhibited clinical signs suggestive of EM. These findings indicate that river otters may develop EM when translocated, but many cases may be mild or clinically inapparent.
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PMID:Exertional myopathy in translocated river otters from New York. 1047 89

Assays of serum enzymes, such as aspartate aminotransferase (AST), lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), creatine kinase (CK) and isoenzyme MB, are widely performed in the early phase of suspected ischemic myocardial injury. However, these enzymes are not restricted to cardiac muscle tissue and increases in their serum concentrations have been observed in non-cardiac conditions. The levels of CK, and especially those of the myocardial specific isoform (CK-MB), have served as essential components for clinical decision in emergency rooms for over 25 years. This standard diagnostic test is far from perfect in specificity and the time delay necessary for the detection of a rise in levels. The clinician needs specific and sensitive biological parameters that can be rapidly measured in serum immediately after ischemic damage. In the last years, several new serum markers of myocardial damage have been developed. Currently, an important place is reserved for some non-enzyme muscle constituents, such as myoglobin and troponin sub-units, which have better specificity and allow an earlier detection of myocardial damage. The immunoassay of human cardiac troponin is a specific and sensitive diagnostic method for acute and sub-acute myocardial damage. It is ideal for the detection of myocardial necrosis in complex clinical situations when the usual enzymatic markers may be ineffective. An important prognostic value of troponin levels, especially troponin T, is currently under investigation. Myoglobin is a protein with low molecular weight that is abnormally high in serum two hours after myocardial infarction. Despite their high sensitivity, the use of serum measurements in the emergency room is controversial because of their low specificity, requiring the exclusion of skeletal muscle damage. Sensitivity could be lost in patients with renal function damage. The measurement of CK-MB protein weight (CK-MBmass) is another marker that has been confirmed as more accurate than CK-MB activity assays, especially in patients presented within four hours after the onset of chest pain, but could be inaccurate in several circumstances. In this research article, the authors describe the most important parameters of enzymatic and non-enzymatic markers, the kinetics of serum release, the clinical applications and the problems.
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PMID:[Serum markers for ischemic myocardial damage]. 1066 Oct 20

Alcoholism is a very important cause of congestive cardiomyopathy in man. The aim of this study was to examine a short-term effect of ethanol in rat cardiac muscle, using histologic, morphometric and biochemical methods. Experiments were carried out in Wistar male albino rats, divided into two groups: the control group consisting of eight animals receiving tap water, and the experimental group comprising eight animals received ethyl alcohol for ten days, in a single daily dose of 3 g ethanol/kg body weight, per os, using esophageal intubation. The mean volume weighted nuclear volume of cardiac myocytes was estimated by point sampled intercept method, by objective x 100. The mean cubed nuclear intercept length was multiplied by pi and divided by 3. For biochemical analysis, a 10% water tissue homogenate from the left ventricle was made. In the experimental group, the mean volume-weighted nuclear volume (15.08 +/- 5.20 microm3) was significantly lower than in the control group (51.32 +/- 7.83 microm3) (p < 0.001). The treatment of experimental animals with ethanol caused significant increase of aldolase (p < 0.0001) and aspartate transaminase (p < 0.05) activity in the rat cardiac tissue; at the same time, the enzyme activity of creatine phosphokinase, alanine transaminase and alkaline phosphatase were not changed in the experimental group compared to the control values. The amount of the glucose in the cardiac muscle was greater in the experimental group compared to the control animals. Our results suggest that there is depression of cardiomyocyte nuclei in experimental animals treated with ethanol. Alcohol intake results in the loss of Krebs cycle enzymes and as a consequence there is greater utilization of fatty acids for energy production.
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PMID:Morphometric and biochemical characteristics of short-term effects of ethanol on rat cardiac muscle. 1066 13

A 29-year-old male who had a past history of mild ECG abnormality of arrhythmia at the age of 14 years, was referred to our hospital because of elevated serum creatine kinase (CK) level. He had never been aware of muscular weakness nor cardiac symptoms. Neurological examination revealed normal muscle strength of all extremities except marked back muscle weakness. He had normal intelligence. On laboratory examination, serum AST, ALT, LDH, aldolase, CK and myoglobin levels were elevated. Both lactate and pyruvate levels were normally responded after an ischemic exercises test. Acid maltase activity was normal in white blood cells. A muscle biopsy obtained from rectus femoris muscle revealed vacuolar myopathy with mildly increased PAS positive material. On electron microscopy, there were autophagic vacuoles scavenging glycogen particles and cytoplasmic debris, and sarcolemmal indentation, compatible with the findings of lysosomal glycogen storage disease with normal acid maltase. This patient had unusual clinical features of absent mental retardation and no apparent cardiomyopathy. Accordingly, mental retardation is probably not necessary to see later onset of cardiac muscle involvement.
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PMID:[Lysosomal glycogen storage disease with normal acid maltase (Danon) without apparent cardiomyopathy and mental retardation]. 1088 38

Skeletal muscle samples from 38 draft horse-related animals 1-23 years of age were evaluated for evidence of aggregates of glycogen and complex polysaccharide characteristic of equine polysaccharide storage myopathy (EPSSM). Cardiac muscle from 12 of these horses was also examined. Antemortem serum levels of creatine kinase (CK) and aspartate aminotransferase (AST) from 9 horses with EPSSM and 5 horses without EPSSM were compared. Skeletal muscle from 17 horses contained inclusions of periodic acid-Schiff (PAS)-positive, amylase-resistant complex polysaccharide. Similar inclusions were also present in the cardiac muscle of 1 horse. A vacuolar myopathy with aggregates of PAS-positive, amylase-sensitive glycogen was seen in 8 other horses, and these findings are also considered diagnostic for EPSSM. Antemortem serum activities of CK and AST were often higher in EPSSM horses than in horses without EPSSM. Using the presence of amylase-resistant complex polysaccharide as the criterion for diagnosis of EPSSM, the incidence in this population was 45%. Inclusion of horses with aggregates of glycogen but no amylase-resistant complex polysaccharide as representative of the range of pathologic findings in horses with EPSSM resulted in a 66% incidence in this population.
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PMID:Incidence of polysaccharide storage myopathy in draft horse-related breeds: a necropsy study of 37 horses and a mule. 1124 65

Seven related Quarter Horse foals that died by 7 weeks of age were examined for glycogen branching enzyme (GBE) deficiency. Clinical signs varied from stillbirth, transient flexural limb deformities, seizures, and respiratory or cardiac failure to persistent recumbency. Leukopenia (5 of 5 foals) as well as high serum creatine kinase (CK; 5 of 5), aspartate transaminase (AST; 4 of 4), and gamma glutamyl transferase (GGT; 5 of 5) activities were present in most foals, and intermittent hypoglycemia was present in 2 foals. Gross postmortem lesions were minor, except for pulmonary edema in 2 foals. Muscle, heart, or liver samples from the foals contained abnormal periodic acid Schiff's (PAS)-positive globular or crystalline intracellular inclusions in amounts proportional to the foal's age at death. Accumulation of an unbranched polysaccharide in tissues was suggested by a shift in the iodine absorption spectra of polysaccharide isolated from the liver and muscle of affected foals. Skeletal muscle total polysaccharide concentrations were reduced by 30%, but liver and cardiac muscle glycogen concentrations were normal. Several glycolytic enzyme activities were normal, whereas GBE activity was virtually absent in cardiac and skeletal muscle, as well as in liver and peripheral blood cells of affected foals. GBE activities in peripheral blood cells of dams of affected foals and several of their half-siblings or full siblings were approximately 50% of controls. GBE protein in liver determined by Western blot was markedly reduced to absent in affected foals, and in a half-sibling of an affected foal, it was approximately one-half the amount of normal controls. Pedigree analysis also supported an autosomal recessive mode of inheritance. The affected foals have at least 2,600 half-siblings. Consequently, GBE deficiency may be a common cause of neonatal mortality in Quarter Horses that is obscured by the variety of clinical signs that resemble other equine neonatal diseases.
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PMID:Glycogen branching enzyme deficiency in quarter horse foals. 1181 63

Eleven native sheep, 1-2 years old, of both sexes were randomly divided into two groups, 6 sheep being allocated to the experimental group and 5 serving as controls. The sheep in the experimental group were fed 80% Tribulus terrestris and 20% alfalfa hay and wheat straw, while the control sheep were given a mixture of 40% alfalfa hay and 60% wheat straw. Clinical signs of hepatogenous photosensitivity were observed from day 11, including reddening and crust formation on the muzzle, nose, ears and eyelids, depression, weight loss, icterus, conjunctivitis, and yellow discoloration of the urine. Laboratory findings on weekly samples indicated significant differences (p < 0.05) in white blood cell count, total plasma protein and fibrinogen, total and direct bilirubin, blood urea nitrogen and creatinine concentrations, and aspartate aminotransferase and alkaline phosphatase activities. There were no significant differences in the packed cell volume, in the neutrophil, lymphocyte or eosinophil counts, or in the serum calcium, phosphorus, potassium, sodium or chloride concentrations. At necropsy of the experimental animals, there were various degrees of generalized icterus and the livers were swollen and discolored by bile pigment. Histopathological examination revealed varying amounts of crystalloid material in the bile ducts and renal tubules, hepatocellular degeneration, biliary fibrosis and proliferation, renal tubular necrosis and focal necrosis of cardiac muscle.
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PMID:Experimental Tribulus terrestris poisoning in sheep: clinical, laboratory and pathological findings. 1262 3

The pericardial fluid was examined in 26 patients without morphological signs of severe damage to cardiac histiocytes, who died unexpectedly from ischemic heart disease (IHD)--main group. The control group comprised 26 persons, who died from other (not heart diseases-asphyxia, acute blood loss, crania-cerebral trauma). The mean age of the died was 57.4 +/- 1.5 years in the main group and 51.8 +/- 2.7 years in the control group. Cardiac markers were examined in the pericardial fluid of the died in both groups, i.e. the activity of aspartate aminotransferase (AsAT), of creatine kinase (CK), of isoenzyme KK-MB, of lactate dehydrogenase (LDG), and its isoenzyme spectrum, and, finally, the content of the cardiac troponin I (cTnI). The statistically reliable differences were found between the two groups according to the activity of AsAT, LDG, its isoenzyme spectrum and the cTnI content. Isoenzymes LDG1 and LDG2 constituted up to 60% of the LDG activity in the pericardial fluid of those who unexpectedly died from IHD. As for the control group, the LDG activity was virtually evenly distributed between all isoenzymes. No differences were found in the activity of CK and isoenzyme KK-MB between the main and control groups. Thus, the obtained data are indicative of the "cardiac" origin of enzymes in the pericardial fluid. Finally, a number of assumptions were put forward on mechanisms of hyper-fermentation in the ischemic damage of the cardiac muscle.
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PMID:[Cardiac markers in the pericardial fluid in sudden coronary death]. 1282 98

The dysfunction of muscles, especially that of the cardiac muscle, is one of the most dangerous for the life pathological states. The determination of biochemical indexes such as AST, ALT, CK, LDH, mioglobin, etc., which has been used so far in animals is not a sufficient diagnostic method. Therefore, new markers, levels of which could reflect the state of a patient more precisely, have been sought. Troponin, a protein found in skeletal and cardiac muscles only, has been considered a reliable index of myocardial ischemia in animals, especially in dogs. Its diagnostic properties have appeared to be a valuable complementation of the other diagnostic methods and thus could have gained a lot of veterinary practitioners interest.
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PMID:Troponin--a new marker in the diagnostics of muscle diseases in animals. 1470 75

In this study we tried to investigate the effect of fructose-1,6-diphosphate and HTK solution on protecting primary cardiac muscle cells of rat with cold preservation. The primary cardiac muscle cells of rat were cultured in vitro with four preservation solutions respectively: 0.9% sodium chloride solution (group A), FDP (group B), HTK solution (group C) and a mixture of FDP and HTK solution (group D). The cells were preserved for 6, 8 and 10 h at 0-4 degrees C. The values of AST and LDH-L and the Na+-K+ ATPase activity in cardiac muscle cells were detected, and the survival rate of cardiac muscle cells was detected with trypan blue staining. The values of AST and LDH-L in group C and group D were remarkable lower those in group A and group B (P<0.001), while the Na+-K+ ATPase activity and the survival rate of cells in group C and group D were much higher than those in group A and group B (P<0.001). The values of AST and LDH-L after 6 hours in group D decreased much more than those in group C (P<0.01), while the Na+-K4 ATPase activity and the survival rate of cells in group D improved more than those in group C (P<0. 01). Both of the HTK solution and the mixture of HTK and FDP solution have an evident effect on protecting the primary cardiac muscle cells of rat in vitro with cold preservation, Compared with the HTK solution, the mixture solution has a better short-term protective effect.
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PMID:The effect of fructose-1, 6-diphosphate and HTK solution on protecting primary cardiac muscle cells of rat with cold preservation. 1620 Dec 75


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