Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.1.1.7 (acetylcholinesterase)
28,390 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The nutritional state of 168 patients in a medical clinic was determined with the following parameters: Weight/height index, triceps skin fold, arm muscle circumference, creatinine/height index, albumin, prealbumin, transferrin and cholinesterase. Using these parameters we found that 51.2% of these patients were suffering from malnutrition (26.2% marasmus, 7.7% kwashiorkor-like syndrome, 17.3% marasmic kwashiorkor). Triceps skin fold, arm muscle circumference and creatinine/height index were the most precise parameters to confirm marasmus. Prealbumin and cholinesterase are especially recommended to determine acute protein deficiency, albumin to confirm chronic protein deficiency. It was also possible to demonstrate the deleterious effect of malnutrition on the immunological system of the patient through determination of the absolute lymphocyte count in peripheral blood and intracutaneous testing with streptokinase-dornase, mumps skin test antigen and candida vaccine.
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PMID:[Nutritional states in a medical clinic]. 44 10

The usefulness of plasma ribonuclease assays was studied in (i) patients with possible protein deficiency, (ii) patients with myelomatosis, (iii) patients with carcinoma of the breast. In each group, the major factor associated with elevation of plasma ribonuclease was impairment of renal function. The assay was therefore of little value in the assessment of patients with myelomatosis or carcinoma of the breast. However, in the patients with possible protein deficiency and normal renal function, an elevation of plasma ribonuclease is, in general, associated with a decrease in serum albumin, transferrin and cholinesterase. Plasma ribonuclease may therefore be a useful parameter in the assessment of protein nutritional status.
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PMID:An assessment of the clinical usefulness of plasma ribonuclease assays. 97 78

Exposure to acrylamide (3-10 mg/kg body weight) was found to be lethal for protein-deficient pregnant rats as evidenced by their increased mortality. It had no such effect on the normal protein diet fed pregnant and nonpregnant rats and the protein-malnourished nonpregnant rats. Protein deficiency during pregnancy caused a significant decrease in the activity of brain monoamine oxidase and acetylcholinesterase and striatal [3H]spiperone binding, known to label dopamine receptors; had no significant effect on the binding of 3H-QNB (quinuclidinyl benzilate) to cerebellar and [3H]diazepam to frontocortical membranes, known to label muscarinic and benzodiazepine receptors, respectively; and had no significant effect on brain glutathione (GSH) levels in comparison with pregnant rats fed normal protein diet. Exposure to acrylamide (2 mg/kg body weight) in protein-malnourished pregnant rats caused a marked decrease in the activity of monoamine oxidase and acetylcholinesterase and also in the binding of [3H]spiperone, [3H]QNB, and [3H]diazepam to striatal, cerebellar, and frontocortical membranes, respectively. Kinetic studies revealed that decreased binding of these ligands in the specific brain regions were due to decreased receptor sites (Bmax). A reduction in the brain glutathione content was also observed in these animals in comparison with those fed a low-protein diet during pregnancy. Pregnant rats fed a normal-protein diet on acrylamide exposure, however, showed no such biochemical changes in comparison with the pregnant rats fed normal protein diet. Also, no effect on any of the parameters studied was observed in the adult nonpregnant rats fed a low-protein diet (for 18 d) and those exposed to the monomer (d 6-17) fed either a normal- or low-protein diet in comparison with respective controls. The results indicate that pregnancy under conditions of malnutrition modifies the susceptibility of pregnant rats toward acrylamide.
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PMID:Protein malnourishment: a predisposing factor in acrylamide toxicity in pregnant rats. 132 27

The acute oral toxicity (LD50) of chlorfenvinphos (Chl) showed no significant difference between Wistar rats (males and females) aged 42 days kept for 30 days on 4.5% or 26%-protein diet, but a twofold difference appeared after 60 days on these diets (LD50 was lower in low-protein rats) showing that a longer period of protein deficiency more increases the susceptibility of rats to the lethal action of Chl. During acute poisoning produced by intragastric administration of single convulsive dose of Chl (30 mg/kg body weight) to rats kept for 30 days on low-protein or optimal-protein diet, changes were observed in the activity of some enzymes in the serum and brain. Protein deficient diet increased the Chl-produced inhibition of acetylcholinesterase (AChE) activity in the brain; the augmented activity of aspartate aminotransferase (AspAT) and alanine aminotransferase (AlaAT) and glucosephosphate isomerase (PHI) appeared only in the serum of low-protein rats--these changes were more marked in females. Other enzymatic alterations caused by Chl were similar independently of the diets and also more evident in females; for comparison the rats received also standard Murigran diet. Activity of the brain aromatic amino acids aminotransferases (AAA) showed a decreasing trend in Chl-poisoned rats, while in the liver the activity of these enzymes rose, but chiefly in the rats receiving previously the diet with 26% of protein or standard diet. In the rats surviving the acute Chl poisoning, with the evidently seen convulsions, the activity of nearly all enzymes was normal after 14 days.
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PMID:Relationship between dietary protein level and enzymatic changes in acute poisoning of rats with chlorfenvinphos. 651 1

The nutritional state of 309 geriatric patients in a medical clinic was determined with the following parameters: Weight/height index, triceps skin fold, arm muscle circumference, creatinine/height index, albumins, prealbumin, transferrin and cholinesterase. Using these parameters we found that 54,4% of these patients were suffering from malnutrition (27,8% marasmus, 9,4% kwashiorkor-like syndrome, 17,2% marasmic kwashiorkor). Triceps skin fold, arm muscle circumference and creatinine/height index were the most precise parameters to confirm marasmus. Prealbumin and cholinesterase are especially recommended to determine acute protein deficiency, albumin to confirm chronic protein deficiency. It was also possible to demonstrate the deleterious effect of malnutrition on the immunological system of the patient through determination of the absolute lymphocyte count in peripheral blood and intracutaneous testing with streptokinase-dornase, mumps skin test antigen and candida vaccine.
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PMID:[Malnutrition in old age - diagnosis and therapy]. 745 14