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Query: EC:2.6.1.2 (
alanine aminotransferase
)
26,722
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Isolated working rat hearts were made ischemic by introducing a one-way aortic ball valve. After the ischemic period the hearts were perfused in a retrograde non-working way for 30 min. Flow rates, glycogen, ATP, and creatine-phosphate went down during the time of ischemia, whereas tissue lactate accumulated. For shorter periods of ischemia these values were normalized but after 30 min of ischemia the hearts seemed to be irreversibly damaged. There was a leakage of GOT,
GPT
, LDH, and CPK from all hearts when ischemic from 5 to 30 min. Different factors that might be of importance for the degree of ischemic injury were tested. The injury tended to be more severe at higher heart rates. Addition of adrenaline 10(-6)M resulted in excessive myocardial damage. A variation of pH from 7.1 to 7.7 did not alter the effects of the ischemic injury. One group of rats were injected with adrenaline for 8 weeks to simulate chronic stress. When hearts from these rats were made ischemic they were more prone to fail compared to controls. The failing hearts, on the other hand, had a lower leakage of enzymes, possibly due to a less severe myocardial damage. A high mechanical performance and a normal noradrenaline content of the hearts are key factors for the development of
myocardial infarction
, as indicated by this study.
...
PMID:Factors of importance for the degree of ischemic injury in the isolated rat heart. 0 96
In a consecutive series of 25 coronary bypass operations, the postoperative serum activity levels of total creatine kinase (CK) and its more heart-specific isoenzyme CK-MB were examined and related to the levels of aspartate aminotransferase (ASAT),
alanine aminotransferase
(ALAT) and thermostable lactate dehydrogenase (LD-T), to electrocardiographic (ECG) findings and to surgical characteristics. Detectable CK-MB activity was found in all patients, usually appearing while the operation was still in progress. Peak CK-MB occurred earlier than peak total CK. There was no ECG evidence of
myocardial infarction
in any patient. The degree of postoperative CK-MB elevation, however, correlated to the duration of extracorporeal circulation (ECC) and aortic cross-clamping (AC). After 120 min of ECC and 70 min of AC, release of CK-MB, as well as of the other enzymes studied, increased considerably. There was a significant correlation between high CK-MB activity and high early postoperative activities of total CK, ASAT and LD-T. When CK-MB determinations are not available, ASAT is preferable to total CK or LD-T in the early evaluation of operative myocardial injury. From the fourth postoperative day, only LD-T is informative in this respect; a second rise of ASAT and ALAT is probably of hepatic origin.
...
PMID:Serum enzymes with special reference to CK-MB following coronary bypass surgery. 31 43
Adult male and female Sprague-Dawley rats were subjected to an isoproterenol-induced
myocardial infarction
. Six weeks before the induction of
myocardial infarction
, some of the animals had been orchiectomized or ovariectomized. The animals were autopsied at regularly timed intervals on days 1, 2, 3, 8, and 15 after
myocardial infarction
. The gonadectomized animals manifested less severe untoward changes, survived in greater numbers, and experienced superior repair of their damaged hearts. Circulating levels of enzymes (e.g., CPK, GOT,
GPT
, and LDH), lipids, glucose, and BUN rose and fell during the acute necrosis and repair phases with distinct differences between the intact and castrated animals. Reciprocal changes in the weight of the adrenal and thymus glands, coupled with dynamic changes in circulating corticosterone levels, reflected marked temporal changes in the spectrum of adrenal steroids being secreted, as well as gonadal hormone mediated changes affecting adrenocortical function. The implications of these findings are that adrenocortical, androgenic, and estrogenic hormones condition the nature of the pathophysiologic response to acute myocardial infarction in rats.
...
PMID:Effect of gonadectomy on isoproterenol-induced myocardial infarction. 45 39
Myoglobin and the enzymatic activity of creatine phosphokinase CK), MB-isoenzyme of CK (CK-MB), aspartate aminotransferase (GOT),
alanine aminotransferase
(
GPT
) and lactic acid dehydrogenase (LDH) were serially determined in 10 patients with acute myocardial infarction. Additionally the same parameters were assessed in 5 patients with angina pectoris for 24 hours after bicycle ergometry. 10 in-patients served as controls. Myoglobin was determined by radioimmunoassay and the other enzyme activities according to the current kinetic methods. Comparison of myoglobin with the enzymatic parameters showed that the myoglobin peak occurs 5.6 hours after the beginning of the sampling period, i.e. 7.3 hours earlier than CK and CK-MB and 11.6 hours earlier than GOT. In analogy to this finding the descending limb of the myoglobin curve was significantly earlier at a level of one third of the peak value, i.e. 8.2 hours earlier than CK-MB, 18.8 hours earlier than CK and 27.3 hours earlier than GOT. No signs of myocardial necrosis in terms of myoglobin or enzymatic activity could be detected after bicycle ergometry. It is concluded that myoglobin is a more sensitive parameter for assessment of the acute phase in patients with
myocardial infarction
than the usualy enzymatic parameters.
...
PMID:[Plasma myoglobin level as a course criterium in patients with acute myocardial infarct]. 53 58
210 male patients hospitalized for cardiac rehabilitation have been studied. As a result of age matching the sample was reduced to 190 patients: 72 patients with
myocardial infarction
, 90 patients with functional cardiovascular diseases, and 28 patients with angina pectoris. At the beginning and at the end of the 4 to 6 week rehabilitation program total lipids, cholesterol, triglycerides, phosphatides, GOT,
GPT
, LDH, HBDH, cholinesterase, aldolase, blood sugar, creatinine, electrolytes, hemoglobin, erythrocytes, leukozytes, and catecholamines were measured. In addition to the statistical comparison of the three groups and their specific change patterns, effects of body weight reduction and improvement of physical fitness were analyzed. The decrease of lipids is especially associated with weight reduction, whereas the decrease of enzyme activity and electrolyte concentration is accompanied as well with weight reduction as with the improvement of physical fitness.
...
PMID:[Biochemical measures in cardiac patients: an analysis of change during rehabilitation (author's transl)]. 69 75
In a group of 113 consecutive patients taken into a coronary care unit on suspicion of acute myocardial infarction, blood samples were taken every 6 h and the following enzyme activities were measured: creatine kinase (S-CK), aspartate aminotransferase (S-ASAT),
alanine aminotransferase
(S-ALAT) and lactate dehydrogenase (S-LD). All measurements were made according to the Recommendations of the Scandinavian Committee on Enzymes. On all patients S-CK B subunit activity was determined by immunoinhibition with a specific anti CK M-subunit inhibitory antibody. At peak values of the respective total enzyme activities CK and LD isoenzymes were further qualitatively estimated by electrophoresis. The data indicate that even serial determinations of total CK, ASAT, ALAT and LD activities in serum do not provide the information required for a conclusive diagnosis of
myocardial infarction
in the individual case. In contrast, the positive predictive value (PV) of S-CK B was found to be 1.0 and the negative predictive value was 0.98. S-CK MB showed a PV pos. of 1.0 and also a PV neg. of 1.0. Electrophoretic determination of S-LD isoenzymes was slightly poorer with a PV pos. of 0.96 and PV neg. of 0.98. S-CK, total activity with nearly 9 per cent false positives had a positive predictive value of only 0.91, but a negative one of 1.0.
...
PMID:Creatine kinase B-subunit activity in human serum. II. Evaluation of s-ck b-subunit activity in the diagnosis of acute myocardial infarction. 88 49
Serum guanase, aspartate aminotransferase,
alanine aminotransferase
, creatine phosphokinase and hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase activities were measured in 290 blood samples from 96 consecutive patients admitted to a Coronary Care Unit. Elevated serum guanase activities (greater than 2 U/l) were found in 19 patients (20%). The magnitude and frequency of these elevations did not negate the value of guanase as a "liver function test", since all cases with raised guanase also had abnormal serum
alanine aminotransferase
activities. This fact, together with other information in the literature, indicated that elevated serum guanase activity following
myocardial infarction
was consequent upon some degree of sub-clinical hepatic necrosis. Caution must be exercised when serum asparate aminotransferase is used as an index of heart muscle necrosis unless guanase or some other "liver specific" enzyme is known to be normal, or unless creatine phosphokinase or hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase activities are elevated.
...
PMID:Serum guanase activities after myocardial infarction. 117 93
The effect of contrykal was evaluated in 146 male patients with first
myocardial infarction
and 116 control patients in the prehospital period. Intravenous contrykal was given in a single dose of 20,000 IU within 30 to 360 minutes of onset of
myocardial infarction
, followed by intravenous administration of heparin, 10,000-15,000 U. The control patients received conventional therapy. Earlier application of contrykal contributed to attenuation of clinical manifestations of
myocardial infarction
. The drug was found to produce a clear-cut antianginal effect. It also exerted a positive action on the abdominal syndrome. There was a rapid inverse dynamics in ECG changes, fermentaemia (aspartate aminotransferase and
alanine aminotransferase
), decreased myocardial necrotic mass.
...
PMID:[Use of contrykal in intensive care of myocardial infarct during the prehospital stage]. 171 Mar 4
Current therapy of
myocardial infarction
may include early reperfusion. We simulated myocardial perfusion conditions during evolving
myocardial infarction
in isolated, normothermic, isovolumic rabbit hearts perfused with buffer containing bovine red blood cells (hematocrit of 40%), and we assessed the effects of high levels of glucose and insulin as "therapy" during prolonged (150-minute) severe underperfusion and reperfusion. Protocol 1 consisted of underperfusion at a constant coronary perfusion pressure of 8 mm Hg. The control group (n = 8) received 5.5 mmol/l glucose and 15 microunits/ml insulin; the group treated with high levels of glucose and insulin (G + I) (n = 8) received 19.5 mmol/l glucose and 250 microunits/ml insulin during both underperfusion and reperfusion. Relative to the control group, the G + I group experienced 1) greater developed pressure during underperfusion and increased recovery during reperfusion, 2) preserved diastolic function during underperfusion and reperfusion, 3) lower coronary resistance and greater coronary flow during the underperfusion period, 4) increased glycolytic flux and preserved glycogen stores and high energy phosphate levels, and 5) less loss of myocyte enzymes (creatine kinase and
alanine aminotransferase
). In protocol 2, coronary flow was kept identical in control (n = 8) and G + I hearts (n = 8) during the underperfusion period, and left ventricular end-diastolic pressure was kept below 10 mm Hg in both groups to minimize subendocardial damage and vascular compression. In this protocol, the effect of the G + I intervention in the prevention of an increase in coronary resistance during the underperfusion period was distinguished from its myocellular metabolic effects; the high G + I substrate had protective effects on mechanical and metabolic function that were less marked than, but similar to, those in protocol 1, indicating that its mechanisms of protection during underperfusion affected both cardiac function and coronary resistance. We conclude that the G + I intervention, in clinically relevant concentrations, markedly protected severely underperfused myocardium for 150 minutes and may be a beneficial intervention in combination with reperfusion therapy in acute myocardial infarction.
...
PMID:Protective effect of increased glycolytic substrate against systolic and diastolic dysfunction and increased coronary resistance from prolonged global underperfusion and reperfusion in isolated rabbit hearts perfused with erythrocyte suspensions. 199 51
The serum myoglobin (MG) was assayed by the radio-immunological method in 30 patients, all victims of a recent
myocardial infarction
(MI) and in 30 tests subjects suffering (21 cases) or not (9 cases) from heart diseases, but none from
myocardial infarction
(MI). The blood samples have been collected on hospital admission of the patient, then every four hours during the first 48 hours and finally, every 12 hours from the 48th to 72nd hour. The normal value is less than 85 micrograms/l. The creatine-kinase (CK), the aspartate aminotransferase (ASAT), the
alanine aminotransferase
(ALAT) and the lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) were also assayed each time. In MI, there is a significant increase in the serum MG level (731 +/- 323 micrograms/l against 174 +/- 198 micrograms/l in the test subjects; p less than 0.001). The sensitivity of this assay reaches 97%, its specificity 80%, its positive predictive value 83% and its negative predictive value 96%. Starting from the beginning of the characteristic pain of infarction, the MG level exceeds the normal values after 3.3 +/- 1.6 hours, reaches its maximum after 9.3 +/- 3.7 hours and comes back to normal after 38 +/- 8.1 hours. On the other hand, the MG level does not enable any conclusion regarding either the transmural/not transmural nature, or the site, or the acuteness of the MI.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Value of the assay of serum myoglobin in recent myocardial infarction]. 218 59
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