Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.1.3.1 (alkaline phosphatase)
47,916 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A prospective study of 21 patients with the diagnosis of non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) was carried out. All patients had hepatomegaly and in 10 (48%) image studies were consistent with steatosis and/or fibrosis. Biochemically, there was increase of AST, ALT and cholesterol in 48%, of GGT in 52% and of alkaline phosphatase in 38%. 18 patients were obese, 2 of them diabetic, 2 others had a history of exposure to drugs (amiodarone and isopropilic alcohol) and the last one presented hypothyroidism. Liver biopsies were studied using a semiquantitative scale to evaluate the degree of steatosis, inflammation and fibrosis in a scale from 1 to 3. Results showed a medium score of 2.6 for steatosis, 1.5 for inflammation and 1.8 for fibrosis. Four patients had cirrhosis and Mallory bodies were found in 11 cases (52%). NASH is an oligosymptomatic disease that can be found in different clinical conditions, mainly obesity, and is more frequent in women. It is histologically indistinguishable from alcoholic steatohepatitis. It is frequently underdiagnosed clinically and must be taken into account as a possible cause of cryptogenetic cirrhosis.
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PMID:[Non alcoholic steatohepatitis]. 765 98

The causes for low serum alkaline phosphatase (ALP) activity (reference range 30-115 U/L) in a large Veterans Medical Center were reviewed. Of 69,864 ALP determinations made over a 4-year period, 130 were low (< 30 U/L, 0.19%), representing 88 individual patients. Of these, 83 (primarily men, 96%) patients' charts were reviewed and classified into two groups, those with and those without conditions previously reported to be associated with decreased serum ALP activity: 47% had conditions associated with low ALP activity, the most frequent being cardiac surgery and cardiopulmonary bypass (26.5%), malnutrition (12.0%), magnesium deficiency (4.8%), hypothyroidism (2.4%), and severe anemia (1.2%); 53% of patients did not have clinical conditions previously associated with low ALP activity. No case of clinically apparent hypophosphatasia, for which low ALP activity is the defining characteristic, was found in this population of veterans. A low serum ALP may be of significance in other patient populations such as children, where it is associated with achondroplasia and cretinism, or in postmenopausal women with osteoporosis taking estrogen replacement therapy. In the predominantly adult male population in this study, low ALP activity was rare; it was seen most frequently in cardiac surgery patients postoperatively, a clinical condition heretofore not commonly associated with low serum ALP activity.
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PMID:Significance of low serum alkaline phosphatase activity in a predominantly adult male population. 772 Feb 39

Specific activities of phosphomonoesterases (acid and alkaline phosphatases) and adenosine triphosphatases (Mg2+, Ca2+ and Na+/K+ dependent ATPases) of dorsolateral prostate were studied in albino rats, under altered thyroid hormone status. Thyroidectomy induced hypothyroidism and thyroxine administered hyperthyroidism (25 micrograms/100 g body wt/day for 60 days, im) showed no impact on the activity of acid phosphatase. Three fold decrease in the activity of alkaline phosphatase was observed in hyperthyroid group. Ca2+ and Mg2+ dependent ATPases were significantly decreased in hypo- and hyperthyroid status whereas Na+/K+ ATPase was decreased in hyperthyroidism and showed an opposite trend in hypothyroid group.
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PMID:Dorsolateral prostatic phosphomonoesterases and adenosine triphosphatases in hypo- and hyperthyroid rats. 781 39

The influence of hypothyroidism in the adult rat on brain biochemistry was investigated. Hypothyroidism was induced in 6-month-old male rats by partial thyroidectomy coupled with the administration of 6-n-propyl-2-thiouracil (0.005%, w/v) in the drinking water. Age-matched euthyroid males served as the controls. Hypothyroidism resulted in brain region-specific changes in certain catabolic enzyme activities. Acid phosphatase activity was reduced in the cerebellum (by 34%) and the medulla (by 38%), whereas alkaline phosphatase activity was decreased in the midbrain (by 37%) and the subcortex (by 49%). A differential response was also observed in the case of aryl sulphatase activity: aryl sulphatase A (myelin-degradative activity) was diminished in the cerebellum (by 56%), whereas aryl sulphatase B remained unchanged in all regions. Acetylcholine esterase activity was reduced in the cerebellum (by 45%), the medulla (by 34%) and the subcortex (by 45%), whereas monoamine oxidase activity was affected in only one region, the cerebellum, where it was increased by (61%). The compromise of myelin and neurotransmitter degradative enzyme activities may place severe restrictions on normal brain function. The vulnerability of the adult rat cerebellum to the effects of thyroidectomy is commensurate with the known clinical signs of cerebellar dysfunction in adult hypothyroid man. These findings raise the possibility of an important role for the thyroid hormones in the mature brain.
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PMID:Hypothyroidism in the adult rat causes brain region-specific biochemical dysfunction. 790 16

Sixty-six dogs with hypothyroidism were identified from dogs examined over a 5-year period. Hypothyroidism was diagnosed only if the dog had a low, resting serum thyroxine concentration and serum thyroxine concentration was not higher than the lower limits of the reference range 6 hours after IV administration of bovine thyrotropin. The prevalence of hypothyroidism was 0.2%. Neutering was determined to be the most significant gender-associated risk factor for development of hypothyroidism. Neutered male and spayed female dogs had a higher relative risk of developing hypothyroidism than did sexually intact females. Sexually intact females had a lower relative risk. Breeds with a significantly increased risk, compared with other breeds, were the Doberman Pinscher and Golden Retriever. The most common clinical findings were obesity (41%), seborrhea (39%), alopecia (26%), weakness (21%), lethargy (20%), bradycardia (14%), and pyoderma (11%). Low voltage R-waves were found on 58% of ECG. Clinicopathologic abnormalities included hypercholesterolemia (73%), nonregenerative anemia (32%), high serum alkaline phosphatase activity (30%), and high serum creatine kinase activity (18%). Serum total triiodothyronine concentrations were within reference ranges in 15% of the hypothyroid dogs. Response to treatment was good in most dogs, but those with severe concurrent disease or neurologic abnormalities were less likely to respond with complete resolution of clinical signs.
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PMID:Hypothyroidism in dogs: 66 cases (1987-1992). 817 72

Hypothyroidism (surgical thyroidectomy) inhibited the activities of acid phosphatase and Mg(2+)-ATPase in seminal vesicular tissue and fluid and that of Ca(2+)- and Na+/K(+)-ATPases in fluid alone, and T4 supplementation restored normalcy in all, except acid phosphatase. Hyperthyroidism (T4 25 micrograms/100g body weight/day for 60 days, im) enhanced the activities of alkaline phosphatase and ATPases in seminal vesicular tissue and fluid, and decreased acid phosphatase activity in tissue alone. Withdrawal of T4 treatment from hyperthyroid rats (after 30 days) augmented the activity of ATPases in tissue and impaired the same in fluid, while phosphomonoesterases remained at hyperthyroid level. The results suggest specific responses of various seminal vesicular phosphatases to altered thyroid hormone status. Modification in the specific threshold of androgen/estrogen action on different phosphatases in seminal vesicles appears to be the plausible mechanism underlying these changes in hypo- and hyperthyroid conditions.
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PMID:Specific activities of seminal vesicular phosphomonoesterases and Mg2+-,Ca2+- and Na+/K(+)-adenosine triphosphatases in hypo- and hyperthyroid albino rats. 822 13

To investigate whether or not there is an association between hypothyroidism (HPT) and chondrocalcinosis (CC) 100 HPT patients and 100 controls matched for the age and sex were evaluated prospectively. All the patients were examined clinically, and X-rays of knees, wrists and pelvis, and biological evaluation of thyroid hormones, calcium, uric acid, iron and alkaline phosphatase levels were recorded. X-rays were assessed independently by two radiologists blind to the thyroid status of the patient. The prevalence of CC was 17% in the HPT patients and 10% in the controls (NS). No correlation was found between CC duration and mechanism or treatment of HPT. We suggest that HPT and CC are two diseases that may co-exist in patients but without any causal or mechanistic relationship.
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PMID:Does hypothyroidism increase the prevalence of chondrocalcinosis? 844 4

We monitored thyroid function in 75 peritoneal dialysis patients (55 +/- 15 years). A total of 20 (27%) were hypothyroid; 9 were diagnosed about the time of initiation of dialysis, and 11 prior to onset of renal failure. Thyroid function surveillance found an increase in serum thyrotropin (TSH) concentration to hypothyroid values in only one patient. On replacement therapy serum thyroxine was similar in euthyroid and hypothyroid patients (6.94 +/- 1.69 vs 6.52 +/- 1.65 micrograms/dL, respectively; p = 0.380), but TSH was higher in hypothyroid patients (5.61 +/- 5.67 vs 2.59 +/- 1.49 microU/mL, respectively; p = 0.001). Serum creatinine (8.6 +/- 3.1 vs 11.4 +/- 5.1 mg/dL, respectively; p = 0.049) and albumin concentrations (3.76 +/- 0.47 vs 3.33 +/- 0.71 g/dL, respectively; p = 0.006) were lower in hypothyroid than euthyroid patients. Hyperthyroid patients had higher serum triglyceride concentrations than euthyroid patients (306 +/- 176 vs 189 +/- 122 mg/dL, respectively; p = 0.013). Parathyroid hormone (PTH) was lower in hypothyroid than normothyroid patients (108 +/- 80 vs 261 +/- 265 pg/mL, respectively; p = 0.032). No differences were observed in serum calcium, phosphorus, and alkaline phosphatase. We conclude that hypothyroidism is common in peritoneal dialysis patients, usually antedates dialysis therapy, results in lower serum albumin and creatinine concentrations and higher serum triglyceride concentrations, is associated with lower serum PTH concentrations, and that thyroid function surveillance is not necessary in the absence of symptoms suggestive of hypothyroidism.
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PMID:Thyroid function surveillance in CAPD patients. 853 10

Beta2-microglobulin has been observed to behave as a biological marker of bone remodeling. We measured beta2-microglobulin and tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP), a specific biological marker of bone remodeling, in 225 women: healthy premenopausal controls, healthy postmenopausal control, and patients with diseases characterized by enhanced bone turnover (postmenopausal osteoporosis, primary hyperparathyroidism, primary hyperthyroidism, polyostotic Paget's bone disease), and in other Paget's group before and after calcitonin treatment. Beta2-microglobulin levels differed significantly between the healthy premenopausal women (n = 20) compared with all the other groups. However, beta2-microglobulin levels did not differ significantly between healthy postmenopausal women (n = 38) and patient's with Paget's bone disease (n = 40)(P = 0.5095), or between women with postmenopausal osteoporosis (n = 30) and women with hyperthyroidism (n = 20)(P = 0.7890). TRAP concentrations differed significantly in all the groups paired except for women with Paget's bone disease and women with either hyperparathyroidism or hyperthyroidism (P = 0.5179 and 0.6993, respectively); likewise, TRAP levels did not differ significantly between the women with hyperparathyroidism and those with hypothyroidism (P = 0.7804). After calcitonin treatment, there was a 22% increase in beta2-microglobulin, a 17% decrease in TRAP, and a 39% decrease in alkaline phosphatase, all of which were significant at P < 0.0001. Our findings indicate that serum beta2-microglobulin, like osteocalcin, behaves as a biological marker of remodeling in a number of diseases with enhanced bone remodeling but not in Paget's bone disease.
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PMID:Beta-2-microglobulin in diseases with high bone remodeling. 867 64

We studied 10 postmenopausal women with Hashimoto's hypothyroidism treated with varying doses of L-thyroxine replacement. Each patient received incremental doses of L-thyroxine sufficient to achieve subclinical hypothyroidism, euthyroidism, and subclinical hyperthyroidism as determined by normal total serum thyroxine levels (80-160 micrograms/L) and serum TSH concentrations greater than 3.5, 0.3-3.5, and less than 0.3 mU/L, respectively. Metabolic parameters of bone turnover (including serum bone Gla-protein, serum alkaline phosphatase, serum procollagen 1, and serum carboxytelopeptide) were assessed once steady state was achieved, and measurements were compared to 10 healthy controls matched for age and years since the menopause. Our findings suggest that overzealous thyroxine replacement producing subclinical hyperthyroidism may result in an increase in bone turnover as reflected by elevated serum carboxytelopeptide concentrations.
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PMID:Fine adjustments in thyroxine replacement and its effect on bone metabolism. 873 75


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