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:2.6.1.2 (
alanine aminotransferase
)
26,722
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The causes and clinical signs of hepatobiliary involvement in disease are many and varied and often are not referable directly to this organ system. Laboratory investigation frequently is necessary to rule hepatic disease in or out, to assess the functional impact on the liver, and to decide whether hepatic disease is the patient's primary problem or a complication of something else. The selection and interpretation of laboratory tests to resolve these problems is based on an understanding of relevant functional anatomy and pathophysiology. The mainstay of such assessment is hepatic enzymology, which can detect active disease in both hepatocytes and the biliary system. The hepatocellular pattern of disease is characterized by increases in leakage enzymes such as SDH, GLDH, and
ALT
and the cholestatic pattern by increases in induced enzymes (ALP and
GGT
). In general, enzymology does not allow the intensity or functional effect of hepatobiliary disease to be assessed, and quite severe hepatopathies may have only minimal enzyme abnormalities. For this reason, the primary biochemical data base for ruling hepatobiliary disease in or out always should involve some screening tests of hepatic function, such as albumin, protein, bilirubin, glucose, or urea determinations; as well as urinalysis to search for bilirubinuria and urobilinogenuria in hyperbilirubinemic patients and for ammonium biurate crystals when hyperammonemia or hepatic encephalopathy is suspected. Because the liver synthesizes most clotting factors, evaluation of blood coagulation is indicated when surgery is contemplated on patients with liver disease or when bleeding is present. Paired pre- and post-prandial determinations of serum bile acids are the preferred method for assessment of hepatobiliary function in dogs and cats. However, the BSP clearance test continues to be useful in the functional assessment of the liver as long as the dye remains available to veterinarians. Clearance of BSP is delayed in hepatocellular, cholestatic, and portosystemic disease as well as by severe extrahepatic circulatory disturbances, In general, this functional test is less sensitive than serum bile acids or the ammonia tolerance test in the recognition of hepatic encephalopathy caused by portosystemic anomalies. The objectives of biochemical screening of the liver are to establish the type (hepatocellular, biliary, or mixed), duration (acute, chronic), and stage (aggressive, convalescent) of hepatobiliary disease and to assess functional status.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Biochemical evaluation of the hepatobiliary system in dogs and cats. 267 13
The liver enzymes
GGT
, GOT and
GPT
, as well as MCV, of 40 alcoholics were examined. They had presented at the psychiatric department of the University for withdrawal therapy. All of them had consumed alcohol up to the time of admission. The laboratory values were obtained on admission, then at weekly intervals for a period of 5 weeks, under total alcohol abstinence.
GGT
(85 per cent) and MCV (95 per cent) demonstrated a high sensitivity relating to alcohol abuse. While the raised
GGT
values reduced gradually, the MCV values remained consistently high even after strict withholding of alcohol. The sensitivity of MCV was not impaired by the previous substitutions of vitamin B complex. At the beginning GOT and
GPT
were elevated in only about half the number of cases and quickly became normal. Because of the more rapid lowering of the GOT activities, compared to the
GPT
activities, the De Ritis quotient sank to below 1 even after only one week. To demonstrate the clinical chemical evidence of the appraisement more clearly, the MCV as well as liver enzymes, must be taken into account. In general there was a decline in the diagnostic value of the laboratory results, the longer the period of alcohol abstinence lasted. Therefore, it is recommended not to set a long term time limit for examination, to favour the motivated total abstinence periods.
...
PMID:[The sensitivity of clinico-chemical markers of alcoholism following short-term motivated alcohol abstinence]. 270 96
Some biochemical, pathohistological and ultrastructural changes in liver after the action of single intraperitoneal administration of furosemide (Furantryl-Pharmachim) in a dose of 300 mg/kg of body mass were studied in male white rats of Wistar strain. The results from the performed experiments established increased activity of serum enzymes GOT,
GPT
,
GGT
, alkaline phosphatase as well as low values of serum cholinesterase. Pathohistologic and electron microscopy examination discovered liver damage with typical congestive changes mainly--manifested local erythremia and a reduced fluid content of the blood in the liver with blockage in the sinusoidal pole of hepatocytes; there were also focal micronecrosis, considerable reduction of glycogen and slight centrolobular steatosis. The possibility is discussed for usage of hepatotoxicity, induced by furosemide, in examining the effects of some drugs with potential hepatoprotective activity.
...
PMID:[Experimental liver damage by furosemide for studying drugs with hepato-protective activity]. 280 81
The causes of individuality of the plasma enzymes
alanine aminotransferase
(
ALT
;
EC 2.6.1.2
), aspartate aminotransferase (AST; EC 2.6.1.1) and gamma-glutamyl transferase (
GGT
; EC 2.3.2.2) were investigated in a study of 206 pairs of twins. Between-person variance was greater in men than women, while within-person variation was similar in both sexes. Plasma
ALT
and AST levels were affected by genetic factors, while
GGT
was affected by some environmental factor shared by co-twins. In the men, alcohol intake had a significant but small effect on all three enzyme levels, and since alcohol consumption was highly heritable, this appeared as a genetic influence on enzyme activities. The major factors involved in the observed correlations between these enzymes were a non-shared environmental factor other than alcohol affecting
ALT
, AST and
GGT
, and a genetic factor affecting only
ALT
and AST.
...
PMID:Individual differences in plasma ALT, AST and GGT: contributions of genetic and environmental factors, including alcohol consumption. 286 Oct 87
The veterinary range of application of the laboratory unit "Reflotron" (Boehringer Mannheim) was tested. This laboratory unit is able to measure the parameters glucose, urea, hemoglobin,
GGT
, cholesterol, triglyceride and in forthcoming future uric acid, AST,
ALT
and creatinine out of whole blood. It is easy to operate this apparatus. The "Reflotron" gives reliable results.
...
PMID:[Clinical testing of a dry chemistry working laboratory apparatus, the "Reflotron"]. 288 54
When 14 "moderate" drinkers abstained from alcohol for four weeks, the activity of gamma-glutamyltransferase (
GGT
; EC 2.3.2.2) in their serum showed a large decrease. Immediately after the period of abstention, an orally given ethanol challenge of 1 g/kg produced a marked increase in serum
GGT
at 24 h, followed by a slow decline thereafter. Aspartate amino-transferase activity in serum was significantly increased at 24 h; however, alkaline phosphate,
alanine aminotransferase
, and lactate dehydrogenase showed much smaller or no changes. An abnormal increase in lactate dehydrogenase isoenzyme 5 was observed in seven subjects. In some of the moderate drinkers, liver biopsies showed mild chronic hepatitis or nonspecific changes. Eight nondrinking controls showed only slight increases in serum
GGT
following the same alcohol challenge; results for the other enzyme tests were unchanged. We consider it probable that pre-existing liver disease affects the response to ethanol, so that greater amounts of
GGT
are released from hepatic tissue; alternatively, drinkers may have a higher
GGT
activity in this tissue as a result of enzyme induction by ethanol. The alcohol challenge test was an effective discriminator between moderate drinkers and abstainers.
...
PMID:Changes in serum enzymes in moderate drinkers after an alcohol challenge. 289 5
Eight otherwise healthy insulin-dependent diabetic patients were subjected to controlled, symptomatic hypoglycaemia for 20 min (median glucose concentration 1.7 mmol/l, range 1.0-2.6 mmol/l). Concentrations of plasma adrenaline and plasma vasopressin were significantly increased, indicating normal counter-regulatory responses for these hormones. Plasma activities of the hepatic enzymes AST,
ALT
, LDH,
GGT
, and CK did not increase during or following the period of hypoglycaemia. Thus, abnormal plasma enzyme activities noted after clinical hypoglycaemia should be fully investigated, and not disregarded as due to the hypoglycaemic episode.
...
PMID:A rise in the plasma activities of hepatic enzymes is not a common consequence of hypoglycaemia. 289 67
Sequential serum levels of carbohydrate-deficient transferrin (CDT) were determined in 72 alcoholics at various intervals during detoxification. Before treatment, 57 patients (79%) had increased CDT values (Group A), whereas in 15 individuals (21%) (Group B), CDT levels were within the normal range. In 51 Group A patients, CDT decreased progressively after cessation of alcohol intake (half-life, 16 +/- 5 days), but fluctuated and remained abnormal in the remaining six. Nine Group B patients maintained normal CDT values throughout the follow-up period, but slightly or moderately increased levels were recorded on one occasion in the other six Group B subjects. Patients whose CDT levels had reached normal values after treatment, showed a recurrent increase in CDT after a relapse. gamma-Glutamyl transferase activities, which were elevated in 56% of Group A and in 80% of Group B alcoholics, showed a decrease after cessation of alcohol consumption in most patients with initially elevated values (Group A, 30 of 32; Group B, 10 of 12). Aspartate aminotransferase (AST) and
alanine aminotransferase
(
ALT
) activities, as well as mean corpuscular volumes (MCV) were normal in the majority of patients. CDT/total transferrin ratios correlated positively with CDT levels. CDT proved to be the most sensitive marker for chronic alcoholism (79%), whereas
GGT
activity levels were more useful only in patients with normal CDT levels before alcohol withdrawal. In the assessment of treatment outcome, the combination of CDT and
GGT
as markers yielded a sensitivity of 95%.
...
PMID:Changes in carbohydrate-deficient transferrin levels after alcohol withdrawal. 290 91
The activities of enzymes of diagnostic interest were investigated in the liver, heart, kidney and muscle of the marmoset (Callithrix jacchus) and the rat. Methods of tissue extraction which gave maximal enzyme activity were used and comparison between the species showed some major differences. AST, LDH and GDH showed a similar distribution in both species but ICDH activity was much higher in the rat heart than in any other rat or marmoset organ. ALP, LAP and
GGT
were present in much higher activities in the rat kidney than in the marmoset kidney, a finding which was reversed in the liver of these animals. The major
ALT
-containing organ in the rat was the liver but, in the marmoset, this enzyme was found in relatively large quantities in the heart and muscle also. These differences can be of importance when plasma enzyme activities are measured following tissue damage.
...
PMID:Tissue activities of enzymes of diagnostic interest in the marmoset and rat. 290 66
Health examinations of 108 workers exposed to vinyl chloride monomer (VCM) at a Japanese chemical plant were carried out in 1979. The polymerization of vinyl chloride was started at the plant in 1949. In this study, the highest concentration of VCM in autoclaves was determined to be 250 ppm in 1961. However, the workers at the plant had been exposed to higher concentrations of VCM several times before 1960. More recent VCM exposure was considered negligible. Examinations assessed data on age, height, weight, obesity index, sake consumption, VCM exposure concentration, latent period, cumulative exposure, ICG (indocyano green test), serum bilirubin, GOT (glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase),
GPT
(glutamic pyruvic transaminase), A1-P (alkaline phosphatase),
GGT
(gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase), ZTT (zinc turbidity test), LDH (lactate dehydrogenase), cholesterol, TTT (thymol turbidity test), A/G (albumin globulin ratio), and thrombocytes. Variation in VCM exposure did not affect tests of pigment excretion from the liver, such as ICG; thrombocytes; and enzyme activity (such as
GPT
); nor bilirubin or flocculation reaction in serum.
...
PMID:Early detection and signs of hepatoangiosarcoma among vinyl chloride workers. 302 84
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