Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Target Concepts:
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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)
gamma-Glutamyl transpeptidase (GGTP) is a sensitive but nonspecific index hepatobiliary disease. In
infectious mononucleosis
(IM) or the
mononucleosis
-like disease attributable to cytomegalovirus (cytomegalovirus-induced IM), GGTP reverted to normal later than aspartate aminotransferase and
alkaline phosphatase
. In three cases elevated serum GGTP activity persisted for up to 24 months -- raising the question of persistent 'post-IM' hepatitis. Such prolonged GGTP activity was unusual in other late IM specimens. Possible, but unlikely, causes for such persistent GGTP activity are an unusual degree of hepatic damage during acute IM, excessive induction of microsomal enzyme system activity by drugs, or unusual Epstein-Barr virus carrier state activation that might contribute to ongoing hepatic structural damage. Other markers of chronic hepatocellular disease including aspartate aminotrasferase,
alkaline phosphatase
, and bilirubin were normal in late specimens from these 3 patients. The cause of their persistent elevated GGTP activities remains unknown.
...
PMID:Late persistence of serum gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase activity after mononucleosis. Report of 3 cases. 1 21
During a 23 year period at Memorial Hospital, the diagnosis of liver cell carcinoma was made in 42 patients who were 11 to 40 years old. Ninety per cent were Caucasian, mostly born in the United states. No occupational hazard was detected. Serum hepatitis antigen was demonstrated in only one patient. Alpha fetoprotein was found in the serum of 55 per cent of nine patients tested. Eight-three per cent were Rh positive, 43 per cent were ABO groups, A or O, respectively. Twenty-three per cent of 13 patients with sufficient material for study had an associated cirrhosis. Of these, active hepatitis with cirrhosis was present in one patient; postnecrotic cirrhosis was present in another. Approximately 7 per cent had a history of previous liver disease. One patient had
infectious mononucleosis
, and nearly 13 per cent gave a family history of cancer. Weight loss or pain in the right upper abdominal quadrant was present in 65 per cent, and hepatomegaly was found in 88 per cent. Only one patient presented with hemoperitoneum simulating an acute condition within abdomen. The liver profile examinations characteristically revealed an elevation in serum
alkaline phosphatase
, 5 nucleotidase, and Bromsulphalein retention with normal bilirubin level. The most common finding, upon roentgenographic examination, was an elevated right hemidiaphragm. Selective celiac and superior mesenteric angiography and 99mTc sulfur colloid liver scans were both done in 13 patients. There was a 75 per cent accuracy rate in localization of the tumor. At laparotomy, the tumor was found to be confined to one lobe in seven patients and involved both lobes in ten. Twenty-seven patients were thought to have multicentric tumors and 15 unicentric lesions. Only ten were found to be candidates for hepatic lobectomy. Five and ten years survival rates were 20 per cent; the operative mortality rate was 40 per cent. Twenty per cent died within a year, ten per cent, one patient, is alive with disease at 28 months and another is free of disease at 31-months. Paraneoplastic syndromes were erythrocytosis in two patients, terminal stage of hypoglycemia in one patient, and hypocholesterolemia with associated excess beta globulin in one patient.
...
PMID:Liver cell carcinoma during the prime of life. 17 34
A characteristic
alkaline phosphatase
(orthophosphoric monoester hydrolase, alkaline pH optimum,
EC 3.1.3.1
) was detected in the sera of most patients with
infectious mononucleosis
, acute and chronic lymphatic leukaemia, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, Burkitt's lymphoma and nasopharyngeal carcinoma. The enzyme was also present in the sera of nine out of 26 patients with cancer of the cervix. N-APase in these cases counted 30-100% of the total
alkaline phosphatase
activity. N-APase was absent from the sera of healthy individuals and of patients with acute and chronic granulocytic leukaemia, breast cancer, colon cancer, rheumatoid arthritis, ulcerative colitis, systemic lupus erythematosis, hepatitis and obstructive jaundice. Only three of 22 patients with Hodgkin's disease showed n-apase activity in the serum. In
infectious mononucleosis
the presence of N-APase activity was well correlated with the clinical course. In 13 cases studied, the clinical improvement was associated with the decrease or disappearance of N-APase activity. N-APase activity could not be detected in white cells of acute myeloid leukaemic patients, nor in the cells of myeloid blastic crisis of chronic granulocytic leukaemia. It was present in the cells of lymphoid blastic crisis of chronic granulocytic leukaemia.
...
PMID:N-alkaline phosphatase: a potential disease marker for lymphoproliferative disorders. 43 2
A new isoenzyme of
alkaline phosphatase
(
EC 3.1.3.1
) has been reported to occur in sera from patients with lymphoproliferative diseases. This enzyme is characterized by an inability to hydrolyze cysteamine S-phosphate. We find that the 5,5'-dithobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid)-coupled assay method for cysteamine S-phosphate hydrolysis is not suitable for serum, and we were unable to confirm the existence of this isoenzyme in serum by this assay method. We were unable to detect to detect this new isoenzyme by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis with activity stains or by the reported high sensitivity of this enzyme to inhibition by cysteamine S-phosphate when p-nitrophenyl phosphate is the substrate. We were also unable to confirm reports of a unique inhibitor of normal
alkaline phosphatase
in the serum of patients with
infectious mononucleosis
.
...
PMID:Serum alkaline phosphatase isoenzymes in lymphoproliferative diseases. 66 47
In this series, the commonest aetiology was tuberculosis (30 cases, 28%), followed by sarcoidosis (18 cases, 17,7%), mediterranean fever (Olmer's disease) (13 cases, 12,1%), brucellosis (8 cases, 7,4%), typhoid fever (7 cases, 6,6%) and idiopathic forms (8 cases, 7,4%). These were followed by Hodgkin's disease, toxoplasmosis, adenosarcoma, and leprosy. Finally, there were single cases due to
infectious mononucleosis
, B.C.G. reaction, hypogammaglobulinaemia, coeliac disease and temporal arteritis. Half of the patients had hepatomegaly and an increase, in general moderate, in hepatic enzymes (transaminases,
alkaline phosphatase
). The highest enzyme levels were seen in cases of brucellosis, hepatic enzymes being normal in patients with sarcoidosis.
...
PMID:[Granulomatous hepatitis: aetiological study of 107 cases (author's transl)]. 73 1
On routine hospital admission, 23,714 patients received a 28-test serum metabolic profile. The 33 most common diseases (4,132 patients) of liver, pancreas, and gallbladder (LPG) had unique chemical templates averaging 15 significant serum deviations. Each LPG disease differed from all others by elevations of both leucine-aminopeptidase (LAP) and
alkaline phosphatase
(AP) levels. LAP level was low or normal and serum glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase (SGOT) and AP levels were elevated in 43 non-LPG diseases. Patients with acute and chronic pancreatitis had elevated amylase levels. The four nonmalignant diseases of the gallbladder were associated with normal levels of amylase and lactic dehydrogenase (LDH); except for silent cholelithiasis, each showed elevated total bilirubin (BIL) levels. Patients with solitary or scattered lesions of the liver had normal bilirubin levels (2,115 patients), and those with diffuse interstitial or parencymal disease had elevated BIL levels. Cancer patients had elevated LDH and alpha1 globulin (A1G) levels, but low albumin levels. The importance of comprehensive liver profiles in the treatment of psychoses is emphasized by significant liver damage in a number of these patients. A1G was normal and LDH was elevated in patients having
mononucleosis
, hepatitis, lupus erythematosus, alcoholism, and alcoholic cirrhosis.
...
PMID:Serum chemistry templates of disease in liver, pancreas, and gallbladder. 116 26
Transient hyperphosphatasaemia was detected in 11 children hospitalized at the First and Second Paediatric Clinic of the Paediatric Faculty Hospital in Bratislava in 1985-1990. The authors analyzed retrospectively 6 children from this group where it was possible to evaluate accurately the trend of serum
alkaline phosphatase
. In all children the high
alkaline phosphatase
activity was detected incidentally during the initial examination. The reason for hospitalization were in four instances respiratory infections, in one instance coeliac disease and in one instance
infectious mononucleosis
with infection of the urinary pathways. The maximum increase of serum
alkaline phosphatase
was 5-15 fold higher than the upper borderline of the reference range for the given age group. The activity declined to normal spontaneously independently on the course of the basic disease and treatment, always in the course of 3-12 weeks. The isoenzyme pattern of
alkaline phosphatase
with a high ratio of the thermolabile isoenzyme was typical. Finally the authors emphasize that recognition of this obscure condition which does not endanger life can spare the children many unnecessary and expensive examinations.
...
PMID:[Transitory hyperphosphatasemia in childhood]. 139 66
The authors report 16 cases of cytomegalovirus (CMV) disease in previously healthy adults. Constant features included pyrexia lasting 3 to 8 weeks and
mononucleosis
occurring 2-3 weeks after the onset of fever. Moderate hepatomegaly without jaundice, splenomegaly and morbilliform or petechial rush were observed in 30 to 50 p. 100 of cases. None had pharyngitis. Mild increase in serum transaminase activity (2 to 5 N) was present in 13 of the 16 patients, but increased
alkaline phosphatase
activity was observed in only 3 of them. Liver biopsy was obtained in 10 patients. Liver lesions were characterised by the association of intra lobular granuloma, abundant mononuclear cells in the sinusoids and hepatic peri-venous inflammation but hepatocellular necrosis was not prominent. Typical intracellular inclusions were not seen, either in hepatocytes or in cells of biliary ducts. The diagnosis was ascertained by positive viremia and or viruria and presence of IgM antibodies. The outcome was favourable although clinical and biological signs lasted for about 8 weeks. The authors conclude that adults with chronic pyrexia, no pharyngitis and sub-clinical hepatitis with mild increases in transaminase activity and histologic
mononucleosis
hepatitis showing mononuclear infiltrates and granuloma formation are likely to have CMV disease.
...
PMID:[Granulomatous hepatitis in cytomegalovirus infection in healthy adults]. 282 62
The patient who has clinical jaundice, abnormal results on liver function tests, or both presents a difficult diagnostic challenge. Many infectious diseases affect the liver, and the extent of involvement determines the degree of clinically apparent jaundice. Some diseases that affect the liver minimally cause no jaundice at all. An important clue to the cause of the disorder is the pattern of abnormal results on liver function tests. Increased
alkaline phosphatase
predominates with Q fever, secondary or tertiary syphilis, clonorchiasis, and hepatic candidiasis, while elevated levels of serum transaminases characterize viral hepatitis, leptospirosis,
mononucleosis
syndromes, legionnaires' disease, typhoid fever, toxic shock syndrome, and yellow fever. Increases in serum bilirubin are typical with jaundice caused by clostridial myelonecrosis, severe bacterial sepsis, and relapsing fever (borreliosis). These findings together with the patient's history, physical findings, and basic laboratory tests provide a presumptive diagnosis in most cases.
...
PMID:Systemic infections affecting the liver. Some cause jaundice, some do not. 305 Sep 27
Various changes in the granulocytes have been investigated in a large series of patients with
infectious mononucleosis
. A high proportion of cases regularly show a neutropenia with a shift to the left during the first three to four weeks of the disease; these changes, though transient, may be profound. The band cells present during the acute phase of the disease also show certain alterations in cytochemical staining and low
alkaline phosphatase
scores are common at this time. The maturation and release of leucocytes from the bone marrow is apparently normal. Theoretical mechanisms for the neutropenia are briefly discussed, including the possible role of excessive peripheral destruction.
...
PMID:Granulocyte changes in infectious mononucleosis. 416 Aug 93
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