Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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)

Urethral obstruction induced in adult male cats caused clinical signs identical with those observed in naturally occurring disease. Central nervous system depression, anorexia, dehydration, vomiting, muscle weakness, and hypothermia occurred. Weight loss (due to water loss and catabolism), metabolic acidosis, mild hyponatremia, hyperkalemia, hypermagnesemia, hypocalcemia, hyperphosphatemia, hyperglycemia, azotemia, and hyperproteinemia were also observed. Serum amylase, alkaline phosphatase, and alanine aminotransferase activities were normal. Ten of 13 cats (group 1), with 72 hours' induced obstruction but not treated with parenteral fluids, died either before the obstruction was relieved or within 8 days afterward. Eight cats (group 2) with induced obstruction for 49 to 98 hours developed severe clinical and biochemical alterations. Treatment with a multiple-electrolyte solution, in addition to relief of urethral obstruction, resulted in favorable clinical and biochemical responses. These cats survived and were clinically healthy at 9 to 10 days after relief of obstruction. It was concluded that use of a multiple-electrolyte solution to correct acidosis, restore circulatory volume, and enhance renal excretion of potassium was effective supportive therapy after urethral obstruction was removed.
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PMID:Characterization and treatment of water, electrolyte, and acid-base imbalances of induced urethral obstruction in the cat. 87 80

Ten children, three girls and seven boys, aged 4-10 years, were admitted with benign acute childhood myositis during spring and winter months (March 1988 to March 1990). They presented with an acute onset of symmetrical calf muscle pain and tenderness, weakness and inability to walk a few days after a flu-like illness. All had raised serum creatine kinase and a normal erythrocyte sedimentation rate, and the majority had low peripheral white blood cell counts with relative lymphocytosis. Serum aspartate aminotransferase, alanine aminotransferase and lactate dehydrogenase were found to be raised in four patients. Virological studies performed in six children gave negative results. Full clinical recovery was achieved within 1-7 days. One child developed a second episode. These ten cases of benign acute childhood myositis are the first to be reported from this region.
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PMID:Benign acute childhood myositis in Kuwait. 128 48

A chronic oral toxicity study of 6-amidino-2-naphthyl 4-[(4,5-dihydro-1H-imidazol-2-yl)amino] benzoate dimethanesulfonate (FUT-187), a new protease-inhibiting agent, was carried out using male and female beagle dogs. FUT-187 was orally administered to the dogs at dose levels of 7.5, 15, 30 and 60 mg/kg/day for 52 weeks, followed by 5 weeks' recovery period. Results are summarized as follows: 1. In general conditions, vomiting, salivation and the passage of mucousy stools were observed in dogs given 15 mg/kg/day or more, and diarrhea was observed at 30 mg/kg/day or more. One male given 15 mg/kg/day showed transient pallidity of the oral mucosa, and another male in the same group showed apnea and abdominal breathing. In addition, one male given 30 mg/kg/day was euthanatized due to extreme weakness, as weight loss and pallid oral mucosa, and another male in the same group died after showing acute toxic symptoms such as hyperpnea, tonic convulsion and ataxic gait. 2. Weight gain was slightly suppressed in females given 60 mg/kg/day. No significant changes in food consumption were observed. 3. Hematological examination revealed no statistically significant changes. Decreases in RBC counts, Ht values and Hb concentrations, and increased reticulocyte counts were observed in one male of 15 mg/kg/day group, which also showed pallid oral mucosa, and in one male of the 30 mg/kg/day group, which was euthanatized in a moribund state. 4. Blood biochemistry revealed increased GPT activity in males given 15 and 30 mg/kg/day and females given 60 mg/kg/day, which was accompanied by sporadic increases in GOT, A1P and/or gamma-GTP activities. Males given 30 mg/kg/day or more showed decreased total protein. 5. Hepatic function testing (ICG test) showed no statistically significant changes. One female given 60 mg/kg/day showed increased accumulating concentration of ICG. 6. There were no toxicological changes in urinalysis, fecal occult blood, renal function (PSP clearance), ophthalmological and electro-cardiographic examinations. 7. In pathological examination, inflammatory cell infiltration and microgranuloma formation in liver were noted periportally or perivenularly in both sexes given 15 mg/kg/day or more (except for 30 mg/kg/day males). In the some cases, atrophy, degeneration and necrosis of hepatocytes and/or fibrosis around inflammatory cells and microgranuloma were observed. In the spleen, one male given 15 mg/kg/day and one female given 60 mg/kg/day showed increased plasma cells in the red pulp. In the case sacrificed in a moribund condition, findings in the liver and spleen similar to those in surviving cases were detected, but were more severe, and the liver showed diffuse fibrosis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:[A 52-week chronic oral toxicity study of 6-amidino-2-naphthyl 4-[(4,5-dihydro-1H-imidazol-2-yl)amino] benzoate dimethanesulfonate (FUT-187) in dogs]. 129 22

A case of B cell lymphoma with clinical and histological features of malignant histiocytosis was described. A 57-year-old male was admitted to Shinshu University Hospital because of transverse myelopathy. Five months before admission, he noticed urinary disturbance, which progressed to urinary obstruction. The following month, bilateral muscular weakness appeared in his legs. A few days later he could not stand up, and was admitted to a local hospital. Neurological examination revealed sensory disturbances below the level of Th12 in all modalities, and marked weakness and hyperreflexia in the lower limbs. A spinal tumor was suspected. However, myelography showed no abnormality. The patient's condition worsened and he became bed-ridden in February 1990. He was transferred to Shinshu University Hospital for further evaluation. On admission he was poorly nourished with fever, anemia, hepatomegaly, and bilateral pretibial pitting edema. No lymphadenopathy was observed. Neurological examination showed total sensory loss below the level of Th12, spastic paraplegia, hyperreflexia in the legs, and urinary obstruction. Laboratory findings revealed an elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate, increased CRP, pancytopenia, and hypoalbuminemia. Serum level of IgG, IgA, IgM, LDH, ALP, GPT and total bilirubin were increased. CSF and MRI imaging of the spinal cord were normal. Proliferation of atypical histiocytes with marked erythrophagocytosis, which is a characteristic pathological feature of malignant histiocytosis, was observed in peripheral blood and aspirated bone marrow. Immunoenzyme staining of bone marrow using monoclonal antibody L-26, which is a B-cell marker, revealed B-cell lymphoma.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[A case of B-cell lymphoma with clinical and histological features of malignant histiocytosis]. 130 24

We conducted a retrospective review examining lipid profiles, creatine phosphokinase (CK) levels, and alanine aminotransferase levels (ALT) in patients receiving the combination of gemfibrozil and lovastatin. Serum lipid levels were significantly improved with therapy over those before therapy. Of the 70 patients receiving the combination, 5 experienced mild elevations in CK, 1 a mild elevation in ALT, and 1 mild elevations in both. No patient reported muscle weakness or muscle pain. The combination of these two medications appeared to be at least additive, highly effective, and well tolerated. The mean total cholesterol, triglyceride, and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels decreased from 278, 306, and 180 mg% to 200, 151, and 129 mg%, respectively, and the mean high-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels increased from 34 to 40 mg%. This retrospective data analysis suggests that the combination of gemfibrozil and lovastatin may be safe in patients with normal renal function when the dosage of lovastatin is limited and when CK and ALT levels are monitored carefully.
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PMID:A retrospective review of the use of lipid-lowering agents in combination, specifically, gemfibrozil and lovastatin. 149 8

Lupinosis is a mycotoxicosis caused by the ingestion of toxins produced by the fungus phomopsis leptostromiformis which grows on lupin plants. An outbreak of natural lupinosis in lambs occurred in Caceres, Spain. Clinical signs were inappetence, depression, constipation, weakness and different degrees of jaundice. Blood samples were analysed every 7 d for 5 w for hematocrit, total protein, glucose, total bilirubin, and GOT, GPT and alkaline phosphatase activities. The last 4 parameters were increased and returned to normal values after 2-3 w. The liver was swollen and a bright yellow color; microscopically fatty metamorphosis, necrotic areas and infiltration of polymorphonuclears were observed. This is the first time that lupinosis is described in Spain.
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PMID:An outbreak of lupinosis in sheep. 174 45

A correlation study was performed on the degree of muscle weakness in 36 patients with dermatomyositis and 69 with polymyositis in relation to muscle biopsy findings, electromyography (EMG) abnormalities, and serum concentrations of creatine kinase (CK), aspartate aminotransferase (AST) and alanine aminotransferase (ALT) enzymes. Statistically significant correlations were found between muscle weakness and EMG results in patients with polymyositis, and between muscle weakness and serum CK and AST levels in dermatomyositis. As expected, correlations were found between the results of the three enzyme determinations in both groups of patients.
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PMID:Correlation between tests of muscle involvement and clinical muscle weakness in polymyositis and dermatomyositis. 208 50

A 25-year-old female patient with an approximate 10-year-history of slowly progressive muscle weakness was diagnosed as a manifesting carrier of Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) because her muscle biopsy showed scattered fibers with no dystrophin on immunohistochemical staining. She had no family history of neuromuscular disorders. She was in good health until about 14 years of age, when she developed muscle weakness and atrophy of the extremities with slow aggravation. On admission at the age of 25 years, she had asymmetrical muscle atrophy in the lower extremities; the left femur, right femur, left crus, and right crus measured 36.0, 40.5, 31.5, and 35.5 cm in circumference, respectively. However, the muscle weakness of the extremities was symmetrical with no laterality, and the proximal muscles in the lower extremities were predominantly affected to 3+/5 MMT test. She walked with a mild wadding manner and stood up with Gower' maneuver. Deep tendon reflexes of the extremities were almost normoactive with no pathologic reflexes. As to laboratory findings, serum enzymes of muscular origin were elevated; GOT was 44 IU/l, GPT 60 IU/l, LDH 829 IU/l, CK 4238 IU/l, and aldolase 31 SL units. The electromyogram showed myopathic changes mixed with some neurogenic components. Peripheral nerve conduction velocity was normal. A computed tomography of the skeletal muscles showed more marked atrophy and lower density in the left lower extremity than in the right. The biopsied left gastrocnemius muscle demonstrated a marked variation in fiber size with some necrotic and regenerating fibers. On immunohistochemical stain with anti-dystrophin antibody, the dystrophin negative fibers were scattered among positive fibers in a mosaic distribution.
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PMID:[A manifesting carrier of Duchenne muscular dystrophy presenting mosaic distribution of dystrophin negative and positive muscle fibers]. 218 62

We report a 5-year-old boy with lysosomal glycogen storage disease and normal acid maltase activity. This patient, the fourth reported in the literature, was referred to our hospital for evaluation of elevated serum GOT, GPT, and CK activities. He had neither muscle weakness nor atrophy. Echocardiography demonstrated marked thickening of the intraventricular septum and left ventricular wall which indicated hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Biopsied skeletal muscle disclosed massive accumulation of glycogen and autophagic vacuoles. Electron microscopy of biopsied cardiac muscle revealed severe myofibrillar disruption with marked accumulation of free and intralysosomal glycogen. Activities of all major glycolytic enzymes in skeletal muscle, including acid maltase, were normal. It is unknown why muscle lysosomes appeared to be unable to digest the trapped glycogen despite the presence of acid maltase. Our findings illustrate the importance of performing skeletal muscle investigation during childhood in patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.
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PMID:Glycogen storage disease with normal acid maltase: skeletal and cardiac muscles. 249 94

We reported a 3-week-old girl with profound generalized weakness, requiring assisted ventilation. There was no consanguinity or family history of any neuromuscular disorders. Serum levels of GOT, GPT and CK were slightly elevated. Although the clinical manifestations mimicked those of Werdning-Hoffmann disease, a lack of the respiratory muscle involvement and the presence of high serum lactate levels suggested an underlying metabolic disorder. During the observation over the months, she gradually improved clinically and assisted ventilation was discontinued at 19 months. Muscle biopsies were performed at 4 and 19 months of age. The first biopsy showed an excessive mitochondrial aggregation and numerous ragged-red fibers. The second biopsy revealed rare ragged-red fibers. However there were definite neurogenic changes including type grouping and angulated fibers. Cytochrome c oxidase (CCO) stain was positive in less than 5% of fibers in the first biopsy but in all fibers in the second biopsy. Biochemical analysis using muscle specimens showed a decreased CCO activity; 18.5% of the control level in the first biopsy and 53.3% in the second biopsy. Immunocytochemistry showed the presence of immunologically reactive enzyme protein in both biopsies. Clinical manifestations of our patient were almost identical to those of two cases reported by DiMauro, et al (1983). The enzyme defect in this case was reversible in contrast to that in the fatal infantile form of CCO deficiency. Histochemical and biochemical bases for these differences were discussed.
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PMID:[Benign infantile mitochondrial myopathy due to reversible cytochrome c oxidase deficiency: histological and biochemical analysis]. 255 79


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