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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)
Inflammatory bowel disease
(Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis) is associated with decreased bone mineral density and increased risk of osteoporosis. However, the pathogenesis of this bone loss is not yet fully understood. In the present study we measured lumbar bone mineral density (by dual photon absorptiometry), serum levels of parathyroid hormone (PTH) and vitamin D metabolites, and serum markers of bone turnover (
alkaline phosphatase
and osteocalcin) in 15 patients with Crohn's disease and in 4 patients with ulcerative colitis. The median duration of the disease was 4 years and the median lifetime steroid dose was 10g of prednisone. We compared our results to a control group of 19 normal persons, who were matched for age and sex to the patients. We found that lumbar bone density was reduced by 11% in patients compared with control persons (Z-score -0.6 +/- 0.6 versus -0.1 +/- 0.8; p < 0.05). In patients, the serum levels of PTH, 25-hydroxyvitamin D3, and calcitriol (1,25(OH)2D3) were significantly reduced compared with control persons. Serum
alkaline phosphatase
activity (AP) was significantly higher in the patients and was inversely related to lumbar bone density. Osteocalcin values were not different between patients and control persons. There was also no difference in serum levels of calcium between the two groups, whereas phosphorus levels were higher in patients. We conclude that malabsorption of calcium was not a primary cause of bone loss in our patients, because we did not find secondary hyperparathyroidism. Accordingly, we did not find a severe vitamin D deficiency, since 25-hydroxyvitamin D3 levels were within the normal range.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Bone mineral density and calcium regulating hormones in patients with inflammatory bowel disease (Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis). 800 8
In colitis, colonic epithelial cells have a shortened life span but show normal or increased expression of phenotypic markers of differentiation. This study examined the effect of differing culture conditions on the expression of such markers in colonic crypt cells. Crypt cells were enzymatically isolated from macroscopically normal large bowel mucosa resected because of neoplasia,
inflammatory bowel disease
or non-neoplastic non-inflammatory conditions. Cells cultured in the presence of serum exhibited a doubling of the rate of protein synthesis (measured by 14C-leucine uptake; p < 0.001) compared with autologous cells cultured in the absence of serum without evidence of loss of cell viability (assessed by 51Cr release from prelabelled cells) or of change in the rate of cell proliferation (assessed by total DNA content and 3H-thymidine uptake). Irrespective of the underlying colonic disease, crypt cells cultured in the absence of serum exhibited increased expression of phenotypic markers of differentiation compared with those cultured with serum: the rate of glycoprotein synthesis relative to that of protein synthesis increased by a mean of 59% and the cellular expression of brush border glycoproteins,
alkaline phosphatase
, and carcinoembryonic antigen significantly increased. The effects seen could not be mimicked by addition of dexamethasone or insulin to serum free medium. Thus, under less optimal (serum free) culture conditions, colonic crypt cells express phenotypic markers of differentiation at an accelerated rate suggesting that unfavourable microenvironmental conditions themselves are probably in part responsible for the normal or increased expression of such markers in colitis.
...
PMID:Serum free medium increases expression of markers of differentiation in human colonic crypt cells. 802 Aug 8
In children with
inflammatory bowel disease
, controversy continues about the use of long-term alternate day prednisone therapy (ADP) to suppress disease activity and to encourage appetite and growth. One possible side effect of both disease process and prednisone therapy is risk of development of osteoporosis. To evaluate this risk factor, growth, biochemical indices of mineral and vitamin D status, and bone mass were measured in nine adolescents with Crohn's disease (CD) who were treated with ADP (0.3 mg/kg > 3 months per year) compared with eight adolescents treated with minimal ADP exposure (< 3 months per year). Single photon densitometry was used to measure bone mineral mass at the 1/3 distal radius three times over 2 years. Mean age of the 17 CD boys was 13.9 +/- 2.1 years at baseline. CD patients had lower bone BMC/BW mineral content/bone width (BMC/BW) compared with age- and height-matched normal boys at all times. The difference was less when compared to height-matched normal values as CD patients were shorter than healthy reference boys. Plasma 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D,
alkaline phosphatase
, and parathyroid hormone significantly increased with treatment of disease but there were no differences between treatment groups. CD patients treated with ADP had similar heights and weights at baseline and demonstrated similar linear growth over 2 years (9.1 cm/2 years) to CD patients without ADP (10.3 cm/2 years). In both groups, BMC/BW increased significantly from year 1 to year 2, but absolute values for bone mass did not differ between the groups.
...
PMID:Longitudinal assessment of growth, mineral metabolism, and bone mass in pediatric Crohn's disease. 814 96
In three experimental models in rats, surgical construction of a self-filling blind loop (SFBL), trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid (TNB) -induced colitis, and the combination of SFBL and TNB, the hypothesis was studied that intestine-derived endotoxins play a role in the pathogenesis of hepatobiliary disorders in chronic
inflammatory bowel disease
(CIBD). After eight weeks of treatment, a mild increase in portal and systemic endotoxin levels and interleukin-6 concentrations was observed and the serum levels of
alkaline phosphatase
, bilirubin, and ALAT were only mildly increased in SFBL plus TNB rats. Histopathological examination of the liver showed hardly any abnormalities in all three rat models. These results show that low-grade portal and systemic endotoxinemia in rats, induced by bacterial overgrowth and/or chemical colitis, is not able to induce hepatobiliary alterations. To exclude definitively a possible role for portal endotoxinemia in the pathogenesis of CIBD-associated hepatobiliary abnormalities, however, an adequate animal model for CIBD is urgently needed.
...
PMID:Experimental colitis in rats induces low-grade endotoxinemia without hepatobiliary abnormalities. 820 Feb 52
We report on 56 children with sclerosing cholangitis (SC) seen between 1972 and 1992. The first symptoms occurred at a mean age of 3.7 years; 15 infants had neonatal cholestatic jaundice. At diagnosis, cholestatic jaundice was present in 25 children, hepatomegaly in 54, splenomegaly in 41, and ascites in 12. Serum
alkaline phosphatase
activity was increased in 49 patients and gamma-glutamyltransferase activity in all patients tested. Most often the histopathologic findings were extensive portal fibrosis and neoductular proliferation. Cholangiography showed abnormal intrahepatic bile ducts in all children and abnormal extrahepatic bile ducts in 35 (63%). The children were separated into three groups: (1) those with SC of neonatal onset (27%); (2) those with SC of postneonatal onset associated with another disease (55%)--histiocytosis X in 14 children, immunodeficiency syndromes in 8, chronic
inflammatory bowel disease
or autoimmune hepatitis in 8, and congenital psoriasis in 1; and (3) those with SC of postneonatal onset without an associated disease (18%). Biliary cirrhosis was present in all but three children after 6 months to 19.3 years of follow-up. Eleven children died of portal hypertension or liver failure, and six died of a complication related to the associated disease. Fifteen children had liver transplantation; 11 of these are alive 6 months to 6 1/2 years later without recurrence of SC. The overall estimated median survival time of children with SC was 10 years from clinical onset. These results indicate that SC should be suspected in all children with a chronic cholestatic disease and increased serum gamma-glutamyl transferase activity, especially when diseases known to be associated with SC are present. The prognosis is poor, but liver transplantation should be considered except in those with severe immunodeficiency syndromes.
...
PMID:Sclerosing cholangitis in children. 828 75
Extracellular matrix regulation of intestinal epithelial differentiation may affect development, differentiation during migration to villus tips, healing,
inflammatory bowel disease
, and malignant transformation. Cell culture studies of intestinal epithelial biology may also depend on the matrix substrate used. We evaluated matrix effects on differentiation and proliferation in human intestinal Caco-2 epithelial cells, a model for intestinal epithelial differentiation. Proliferation, brush border enzyme specific activity, and spreading were compared in cells cultured on tissue culture plastic with interstitial collagen I and the basement membrane constituents collagen IV and laminin. Each matrix significantly increased
alkaline phosphatase
, dipeptidyl peptidase, lactase, sucrase-isomaltase, and cell spreading in comparison to plastic. However, the basement membrane proteins collagen IV and laminin further promoted all four brush border enzymes but inhibited spreading compared to collagen I. Proliferation was most rapid on type I collagen and slowest on laminin and tissue culture plastic. Basement membrane matrix proteins may promote intestinal epithelial differentiation and inhibit proliferation compared with interstitial collagen I.
...
PMID:Regulation of human (Caco-2) intestinal epithelial cell differentiation by extracellular matrix proteins. 866 Sep 18
Inflammation of the bile ducts was studied in liver biopsies from patients with chronic hepatitis C to determine whether the frequency of inflamed bile ducts changes with therapy and correlates with other histological variables and expression of class I and II MHC antigens on ductal epithelium. Twenty patients treated at UMMC between 1991 and 1994 underwent needle biopsies of the liver before and after therapy with interferon alpha 2B (IFN). A complete response to therapy was defined as a return to normal serum alanine aminotransferase levels occurring and persisting during therapy. The number of inflamed bile ducts/total ducts (%IBDs), presence of piecemeal necrosis and lymphoid aggregates, and grade of inflammation were assessed in each high-power field in all areas with bile ducts. The frequencies of these variables were compared in cirrhotics and non-cirrhotics and in patients with complete or incomplete responses to IFN. Frozen sections of biopsies from 5 patients were immunostained using antibodies to HLA-DR and B-2 microglobulin, and positive staining was noted on bile ducts. Before therapy, the %IBD was slightly greater in patients with cirrhosis. After IFN, both %IBD and serum
alkaline phosphatase
levels decreased in non-cirrhotics who responded to IFN. The change in frequency of
IBD
with IFN paralleled the changes in the other histological features. No correlation was noted between bile duct inflammation and expression of class I and II antigens. The conclusion is that inflammation of the bile ducts occurs frequently in chronic hepatitis C, correlates with other features of inflammation in the triads, and decreases in response to IFN therapy.
...
PMID:Effect of interferon therapy on bile duct inflammation in hepatitis C. 876 34
The intriguing co-infection of two flaviviruses (GBV-A and GBV-B) in tamarins and the recent discovery of another flavivirus (GBV-C/HGV) in humans raises the question of the relations between hepatitis C virus (HCV) and GBV-C/HGV. To address this issue the sera of 285 patients with liver disease (102 patients with cryptogenic and 183 with known forms of chronic liver disease) and 19 patients without liver disease were tested for HGV-RNA. GBV-C/HGV-RNA was detected by RT-PCR using primers encompassing 5'NC and NS5 regions and hybridization with specific biotinilated and radiolabelled probes. GBV-C/HGV RNA was found in 11 of 20 (55%) acute hepatitis C patients, in 13 of 117 (11.1%) patients with chronic hepatitis C, in 11 of 27 patients with a liver transplant (40.7%), one of 19 (5.3%) patients with chronic HBV infection, 15 out of 102 (14.7%) patients with cryptogenic liver disease and two out of 19 patients with
inflammatory bowel disease
. In cryptogenic patients, elevated serum gammaglutamyl transpeptidase (GGT, higher than twice the normal values) and
alkaline phosphatase
(ALP, above normal values) levels were significantly associated with GBV-C/HGV-RNA infection (P < 0.001). In conclusion GBV-C/HGV appears to be transmitted in humans by blood exposure and to be associated with liver disease in HCV co-infected patients and in a minority of patients with cryptogenic disease. The virus is only occasionally pathogenic for the liver and when liver damage is present; the association with the combined elevation of GGT and APH serum levels might represent a specific feature of the liver tropism of the agent.
...
PMID:A new hepatitis C virus-like flavivirus in patients with cryptogenic liver disease associated with elevated GGT and alkaline phosphatase serum levels. 909 79
A disease similar to ulcerative colitis in humans has been identified in cotton-top tamarins (CTTs) in captivity. The clinical signs include weight loss, diarrhea, and rectal bleeding with the pathological features and biochemical abnormalities of ulcerative colitis. Approximately 25 to 40% of these animals develop colon cancer after 2 to 5 years of captivity. An infectious etiology has been proposed; however, no microbial agent to date has been identified. Helicobacter spp. have been associated with enterocolitis and
inflammatory bowel disease
(
IBD
) in humans and animals. Infection with Helicobacter pylori or Helicobacter mustelae is associated with an increased risk of gastric adenocarcinoma and lymphoma of the mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue. Helicobacter hepaticus causes hepatitis, hepatic adenomas, and hepatocellular carcinomas in susceptible strains of mice. The aim of this study was to assess a colony of CTTs with a high incidence of
IBD
and colon cancer for the presence of colonic Helicobacter spp. A fusiform, gram-negative bacterium with bipolar flagella and periplasmic fibers was isolated from the feces of CTTs. The bacterium grew under microaerobic conditions at 37 and 42 degrees C but not at 25 degrees C, did not hydrolyze urea, was positive for catalase and oxidase, did not reduce nitrate to nitrite, did not hydrolyze indoxyl acetate or
alkaline phosphatase
, and was resistant to nalidixic acid, cephalothin, and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole. On the basis of 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis, the organism was classified as a novel Helicobacter species. This is the first Helicobacter isolated from CTTs. Further studies are needed to elucidate the role of this novel Helicobacter sp. in the pathogenesis of ulcerative colitis and colonic adenocarcinoma in CTTs.
...
PMID:Novel intestinal Helicobacter species isolated from cotton-top tamarins (Saguinus oedipus) with chronic colitis. 985 80
The effects of dietary catechins and alpha-tocopherol on
inflammatory bowel disease
in rats were examined. Male 9-week-old rats were intracolonically administrated trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid (TNBS) and fed the experimental diets containing 0.05% catechin and 0.025% alpha-tocopherol for 1 week, then dissected. The extent of colitis-induced TNBS was assessed macroscopically. The supplementation of catechins and alpha-tocopherol significantly decreased colonic damage compared with the group fed the basal diet (the disease control). In particular, catechin feeding completely inhibited the development of colon adhesions. Colonic myeloperoxidase (MPO) activity, which is a marker of neutrophil infiltration into the colonic mucosa, was lower in the groups that had been given catechins and alpha-tocopherol. The levels of thiobarbituric acid reactive substances in colon was highest in the disease control group; however, the differences among the groups were not significant. Plasma
alkaline phosphatase
activity was maintained at normal levels in the rats supplemented with catechins and alpha-tocopherol. These results suggest that catechins and alpha-tocopherol have anti-inflammatory effects on TNBS-induced rat colitis.
...
PMID:Dietary supplementation of catechins and alpha-tocopherol accelerates the healing of trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid-induced ulcerative colitis in rats. 1019 8
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