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:3.1.26.9 (
ribonuclease
)
6,589
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Animal experiments have shown that malnutrition and protein deficiency states, respectively are associated with elevated tissue
ribonuclease
(RNase, E.C. 3.1.4.22) activities. The causal intracellular alterations are unknown. Assuming that increased tissue RNase activities are reflected by serum levels, a study was made of the serum RNase activities in 10 healthy controls eating a normal diet (group I), 7 patients on long-term parenteral nutrition (group II), 13 chronic hemodialysis patients (group III), and 9 patients with
acute pancreatitis
(group IV). In group I the serum RNase activity corresponded to 195.3 + or -58.8 U/ml. A significant (p less than 0.005) elevation was noted in groups II (314.6 +/- 95.3 U/ml) and III (374.1 +/- 102.1 U/ml), no difference being detected in group IV (295.1 +/- 191.9 U/ml).
...
PMID:Serum ribonuclease activity in patients during parenteral nutrition, chronic hemodialysis and acute pancreatitis. 41 11
Pancreatic necrosis is a principal determinant of the severity, duration, and infectious complications of
acute pancreatitis
. There has been no objective index for pancreatic necrosis, and its recognition has necessarily rested upon nonspecific clinical signs, including later deterioration or appearance of sepsis. In search of such an index, we have measured serum levels of a poly-[C]-specific acid ribonuclease (
RNase
) in 38 patients with
acute pancreatitis
, 12 patients with chronic pancreatitis, and 50 control patients. The values in chronic pancreatitis (mean, 52 units; range, 33 to 80 units) were within observed normal limits (mean, 51; range, 17 to 94). The values in
acute pancreatitis
segregated into two groups, normal values (group A) and high values (group B). Of 25 patients in group A (mean, 46; range, 19 to 87), only one developed evidence of pancreatic necrosis or abscess. In contrast, of the 13 patients in group B (mean, 192, range, 98 to 385), 11 required surgical debridement/drainage for pancreatic necrosis (six) or abscess (five) (P less than 0.001). Each of the other two patients had prolonged pancreatic inflammation with fever and a pancreatic mass which persisted for more than 2 weeks.
RNase
levels in group B patients rose within a few days after onset of pancreatitis and tended to parallel the clinical course. These findings suggest that measurement of serum
RNase
in
acute pancreatitis
gives a reliable indication of pancreatic necrosis. Therefore
RNase
determinations should be of value for earlier identification and monitoring of patients at high risk of late complications, and for helping to select those who will benefit from early debridement before secondary infection occurs.
...
PMID:Serum ribonuclease elevations and pancreatic necrosis in acute pancreatitis. 46 72
The method of intraductal administration of
ribonuclease
as a therapeutic measure was developed on an experimental model of
acute pancreatitis
in albino rats. Morphological and biochemical examination showed that intraductal administration of
ribonuclease
in a dose of 0.5 mg produces a positive therapeutic effect, which allowed the method to be applied in complex treatment of 33 patients with various forms of
acute pancreatitis
. Administration of
ribonuclease
into the pancreatic duct relieved the attack of pain and reduced the level of lipo- and proteolytic enzymes in blood. No complications were encountered in endoscopic cannulation of the main pancreatic duct and subsequent administration of
ribonuclease
.
...
PMID:[Use of ribonuclease in multimodal treatment of acute pancreatitis]. 204 54
To clarify the relationship between changes in serum pancreatic enzymes and pathological changes in pancreatic parenchyma, this study was performed by using rat models with
acute pancreatitis
. The models were rats with edematous and necrotizing pancreatitis. Amylase, lipase,
ribonuclease
(
RNase
), and deoxyribonuclease (DNase I, II) in the serum were determined for 48 h after the development of pancreatitis. Amylase and lipase levels rose directly in both pancreatitis groups. These enzymes in the necrotizing pancreatitis group were higher than those in the edematous pancreatitis group, but there was no significant difference.
RNase
levels also rose markedly, but there was no obvious difference between either of the pancreatitis groups. On the other hand, DNase levels were high in the necrotizing pancreatitis group but low in the edematous pancreatitis group, with significant differences between the two groups, especially in the DNase II levels over a 36-h period (p less than 0.05-0.01). Therefore, these results suggest that serum DNase levels reveal the necrotizing changes in pancreatic parenchyma.
...
PMID:Relationship between pancreatic enzymes and pathological changes in the pancreas in acute pancreatitis. The significance of determination of serum deoxyribonuclease. 247 54
Serum
ribonuclease
(
RNase
) activity and its isoenzymes were determined by biochemical and PAGE electrophoretic separation technique in 20 patients with pancreatic cancer, in 27 with other gastroenterologic malignant tumors, 8 with
acute pancreatitis
, 7 with chronic pancreatitis, 5 with leukemia, 3 with chronic uremia of glomerulonephritis, and in 30 adult normal controls. Serum A1AT rocket immunoelectrophoresis and carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) radioimmunoassay were also carried out simultaneously.
...
PMID:Serum ribonuclease and its isoenzymes for diagnosis of pancreatic cancer. 250 4
We have described a spectrum of pancreatic surgery after cardiopulmonary bypass. At one end is a subclinical lesion which was manifested only by elevations in serum isoamylase levels (27 percent of patients) and increased
ribonuclease
levels (13 percent of patients) in asymptomatic patients followed after cardiac surgery. At the other end is a severe and often lethal necrotizing pancreatitis. Acute necrotizing pancreatitis was found at autopsy in 25 percent of 138 patients who died after cardiac surgery, and it correlated strongly with low output, acute tubular necrosis, and infarction of the liver, spleen, or bowel. It was the principal cause of death in 4 percent of these patients. In addition, 24 percent of 38 nonsurgical patients who died from cardiac failure and hypoperfusion had
acute pancreatitis
at autopsy, whereas
acute pancreatitis
was not observed in 55 nonsurgical patients who died without a significant period of low output.
Acute pancreatitis
was recognized postoperatively in 12 patients (0.2 percent). Three had mild pancreatitis, and all responded well to conservative therapy. In nine patients, fulminant necrotizing pancreatitis developed. Their courses were characterized by significant early postoperative hemodynamic compromise, abdominal distention, ileus, fever, and episodes of late vascular instability associated with hypocalcemia. The diagnosis of pancreatitis was usually missed because of the absence of pain, tenderness and hyperamylasemia. The diagnosis was confirmed at laparotomy in eight patients and at autopsy in one. The only two survivors among the nine with severe cases had aggressive mobilization, debridement, and wide drainage of the necrotic pancreas. We suggest that a mild subclinical injury to the pancreas may occur as a consequence of cardiopulmonary bypass and may progress to severe ischemic necrosis if hypoperfusion follows in the postoperative period, the presentation of necrotizing pancreatitis may be atypical in the cardiac surgical patient and should be considered if nonspecific abdominal symptoms are present, and aggressive debridement and drainage may be the optimal treatment for aggressive forms of this disease.
...
PMID:Acute pancreatitis after cardiopulmonary bypass. 258 Apr 53
Though the substantial part of serum
ribonuclease
(EC 3.1.27.5) is of pancreatic origin, there are no consistent data on changes in activity of serum alkaline ribonuclease in
acute pancreatitis
. The recent findings suggest that the increase in
ribonuclease
activity refers only to patients with necrotic outcome of
acute pancreatitis
. The aim of this study was to reevaluate the suggestion that elevated
ribonuclease
activity is specifically related to pancreatic necrosis. Our studies included 57 patients with verified
acute pancreatitis
, and 11 patients evolving haemorrhagic or necrotic lesions of the pancreas. It was found, that the enzyme increasing in some percentage of patients with
acute pancreatitis
is the Poly-C avid "pancreatic"
ribonuclease
. This enzyme begins to increase in the 2nd or third day after onset of the disease, always after decrease in serum amylase activity down to levels close to normal range. Ribonuclease activity increased up to days 5 or 6 of the disease, and then decreased along with diminution of disease symptoms upon treatment. Correlation studies showed that increased
ribonuclease
activity in
acute pancreatitis
is related to a higher than the 2nd degree of severity of the clinical course of the disease, to pancreatic necrosis, death, diminished glomerular filtration rate, and age. Thus, pancreatic necrosis is not the exclusive factor directing the increased
ribonuclease
activity in
acute pancreatitis
, but the increased
ribonuclease
activity seems to be a late marker of
acute pancreatitis
of a severe clinical course.
...
PMID:Determination of ribonuclease activity in serum of patients with pancreatic necrosis. An attempt of extending the enzyme diagnosis of acute pancreatitis. 261 34
The levels of pancreatic digestive enzymes, lysosomal hydrolases, and protease inhibitors were evaluated in ascites fluid from 24 patients with
acute pancreatitis
diagnosed as alcoholic, gallstone-induced, or idiopathic. In this group the concentrations of amylase (354 +/- 98 ng/ml), immunoreactive cationic trypsinogen (1840 +/- 238 ng/ml), and immunoreactive elastase 2 (1492 +/- 262 ng/ml) were greatly elevated in comparison to the corresponding serum values. Enzyme levels in ascites from the idiopathic pancreatitis group tended to be higher than the levels from the other two groups. Activity of acid phosphatase and beta-glucuronidase was significantly higher in ascites compared to serum in all groups. On the other hand, levels of immunoreactive alpha 1-protease inhibitor and alpha 2-macroglobulin in ascites fluid were about half the average concentrations reported for normal serum. Significant amounts of tryptic amidase activity (61.7 +/- 13.7 micrograms/ml) were observed, indicating a trypsin-alpha 2-macroglobulin complex. These data indicate an imbalance in the protease-to-inhibitor ratio in ascites fluid from patients with
acute pancreatitis
. Coupled with elevated
ribonuclease
activity (27.4 +/- 3.4 units), a positive methemalbumin test in 23 of 24 patients (1.1 +/- 0.4 mg hematin/100 ml), and an average protein concentration of 4.0 +/- 0.2 g/100 ml, these observations demonstrate that abdominal paracentesis and the biochemical analyses of ascites fluid provide useful information related to the biochemical events in
acute pancreatitis
and may be useful in the diagnosis of difficult cases, but their predictive value of severity remains to be established.
...
PMID:Biochemical studies in peritoneal fluid from patients with acute pancreatitis. Relationship to etiology. 381 84
Poly-[C]-specific
ribonuclease
(
RNase
) is released in large amounts from rat pancreas incubated at 37 degrees C in isotonic saline solution. Pancreatic cell disruption by homogenization releases only 10% of that
RNase
. The remainder, perhaps membrane-bound, is freed only after further membrane deterioration during anoxic incubation. Other tissues (small intestine, stomach, colon, liver, spleen, kidney, muscle, and skin) do not appear to contain much of this
RNase
or to release it during anoxic incubation. Relatively little amylase is released from the pancreas under the conditions that release
RNase
. The findings provide a rational basis for monitoring serum
RNase
levels in patients with
acute pancreatitis
for early detection and treatment of pancreatic necrosis in man.
...
PMID:Release of ribonuclease from anoxic pancreas. 620 Sep 44
The serum levels of a poly-[C]-specific acid ribonuclease (
RNase
) found in the pancreas was measured in 40 normal persons and 137 patients with pancreatic cancer, other cancers, obstructive jaundice,
acute pancreatitis
or chronic pancreatitis. Serum
RNase
increased by as much as 800 percent above normal in 69 percent of patients with pancreatic cancer. Analysis of the serum isoenzymes of
RNase
by isoelectric focusing did not reveal any unique RNases produced by the tumours. In contrast, serum
RNase
rose in only 8 percent of patients with other cancers, 11 percent of other patients with obstructive jaundice and in no patients with chronic pancreatitis. These data suggest that the finding of increased serum
RNase
is of adjunctive value inthe diagnosis of pancreatic carcinoma and may be particularly helpful in distinguishing it from other causes of biliary obstruction and from chronic pancreatitis.
...
PMID:Sensitivity and specificity of serum ribonuclease in the diagnosis of pancreatic cancer. 735 Aug 42
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