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)

In 38 patients subjected to retropubic prostatectomy the effects of continuous lumbar epidural analgesia for 24 hours and the thiopentone- oxygen-nitrous oxide- alcuronium-pethidine sequence with artificial ventilation on the serum activities of aspartate aminotransferase (ASAT), alanine aminotransferase (ALAT), alpha-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase (HBD), and alkaline phosphatase (AP) have been studied. Per- and postoperative complications were recorded according to a prearranged plan designed to quantify the peroperative haemorrhage, postoperative deep vein thrombosis, pulmonary, circulatory and infectious complications. ASAT, ALAT and AP in the general group and ALAT in the epidural group showed significant increases on the 5th and 7th postoperative days. There existed no statistically significant difference between the groups. 82% of the patients with documented postoperative complications combined with hypoxaemia showed a pathologic liver enzyme pattern in contrast to 9% of the patients with uneventful postoperative course. It is concluded that the method of anaesthesia did not have an effect on the liver enzymes. Complications combined with postoperative hypoxaemia seemed to be the factors responsible for the increases of liver enzymes.
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PMID:Liver enzymes after retropubic prostatectomy in patients receiving continuous lumbar epidural analgesia or general anaesthesia. 618 33

Serum creatine phosphokinase (CK) and alkaline phosphatase (ALP) rise after mesenteric infarction; it is not known which one rises earlier or which one has the greater elevation. This experiment compared and contrasted the elevations in both these enzyme systems after acute small bowel infarction. Isoenzymes of both systems were analyzed to determine if any qualitative changes occurred. After baseline blood samples had been drawn, 10 dogs had midline laparotomies under general anesthesia. Each was assigned to one of two groups according to a randomized block design. Controls (CON) were closed after exploration (N = 5). The infarction (INF) group had ligation and division of the arteries to the jejunum and ileum (N = 5). Blood samples were obtained from both groups at 3, 6, 9, 12, 24, and 27 hr after surgery. Sera were analyzed for total CK and ALP activity by automated spectrophotometry. Isoenzymes were determined by agarose gel electrophoresis. Serum CK rose faster and to a higher level than ALP after small bowel infarction (470 +/- 181 vs 196 + 28 IU/liter). CK-BB was a better marker of small bowel necrosis than was intestinal ALP. The elevation of both CK and ALP by 12 hr after infarction may be a diagnostic aid if similar changes occur in humans.
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PMID:Serum creatine kinase and alkaline phosphatase in experimental small bowel infarction. 673 45

Liver damage was produced in male Wistar rats aged 15 weeks by daily oral administration of 40 mg/kg thioacetamide over a period of 24 weeks. All of the animals were weighed once a week. Furthermore, the duration of hexobarbital anaesthesia and the activities of the enzymes ASAT, ALAT, GIDH, LDH, LAP and alkaline phosphatase in the serum were determined in 6 experimental and 4 control animals after 3 d and 1, 2 and 4 weeks, and then at intervals of 4 weeks. For the purpose of comparison the same investigations were performed (under identical experimental conditions) both in rats fed normally and rats starved for 24 h to which a single dose of thioacetamide was applied. The histological study of the livers revealed destruction of the lobule architecture and profuse bile-duct proliferations after 12 weeks. Cirrhosis was observed after 16 weeks. The activities of ASAT, ALAT, GIDH and LDH increased for a short time and then returned closely to normal. During the whole experimental period, the LAP and alkaline phosphatase activities remained in the pathological range, as well as the duration of hexobarbital anaesthesia. Enzyme diagnosis is not suitable for assessing the degree of severity of a liver damage produced by thioacetamide.
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PMID:[Enzyme activities in the blood serum from rats with chronic liver damage. part 3: Effect of thioacetamide]. 686 88

True reference values (TRV) should ultimately be determined in blood from inactive, unstimulated rats but in practice, acceptable reference values (ARV) may be established using blood from decapitated or anesthetized animals if one is cognizant of variations associated with blood sampling procedures. Data reported here illustrate some variations in serum biochemical values following decapitation or anesthesia. Decapitation does not provide serum in which ARV for sodium, potassium or lactate dehydrogenase can be found but ARV can be determined for glucose, insulin and several other parameters. It is suggested that both TRV and ARV for serum electrolytes be determined using serum from cannulated rats. All three anesthetics raised glucose levels and ether and halothane increased alkaline phosphatase activity. Both halothane and Innovar-VetR decreased insulin:glucose ratios suggesting inhibition of insulin release from the pancreas. Innovar-VetR also produced hypoxia due to severe respiratory depression and bradycardia as well as hyperuricemia, hyperglycemia and hyperphosphatemia. Techniques most likely to provide ARV should be of the shortest possible duration, afford least respiratory and cardiovascular suppression and minimize stimulation of the sympathetic nervous system.
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PMID:Variation of rat serum biochemical values following decapitation or anesthesia with ether, halothane or Innovar-VetR: rapid Innovar-VetR-induced hyperuricemia and hyperglycemia. 704 81

After major surgery some patients, especially those with an infectiouss process or sepsis, develop jaundice which has been called reactive hepatitis, toxic hepatitis, septic hepatitis or benign postoperative cholestasis; these terms do not have a very precise connotation. Eighty patients with postoperative sepsis and jaundice where studied, excluding those with liver or biliary tract disease, hepato-toxic drugs or repeated halogenated anesthetics. All of them had complete laboratory tests, cultures and percutaneous liver biopsy when it was feasible. Thirty five patients were submitted to percutaneous liver biopsy and they are the material for this paper. There was no correlation with the type and duration of the operation, postoperative complications, shock or kind of anesthesia. The main laboratory changes were leukocytosis, neutrophilia, elevation of the bilirubins mainly the direct type and increase of the alkaline phosphatase; transaminases were within normal limits. Cultures were positive in 76% of the cases predominating E. coli, Pseudomonas a. and Proteus, anaerobics were present in 22.8% of the cases. The liver biopsy showed lymphoctic infiltration, hyperplasia of the Kupffer cells, hepatic regeneration and turbid tumefaction; pericholangitis, focal necrosis, retention of pigment and steatosis were less frequent. We consider that the best denomination of these complications is benign postoperative cholestasis.
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PMID:[Postoperative reactive hepatitis in the septic patient]. 728 Apr 56

Postoperative changes in serum bilirubin, various serum enzymes (alanine-amino transferase ALAT), alkaline phosphatase (AP), lactate-dehydrogenase (LDH), and creatine-phosphokinase (CPK)), plasma glucose and cortisol were studied in 20 healthy, premenopausal women undergoing elective abdominal hysterectomy under either general anaesthesia with halothane or epidural analgesia (T4-S5). Surgery under general anaesthesia was followed by increased levels of bilirubin, LDH, CPK, glucose and cortisol, whereas AP and ALAT were unaffected by surgery. Epidural analgesia inhibited increases in LDH, CPK, glucose and cortisol (P less than 0.05), but not the increase in bilirubin. The results indicate that afferent neurogenic stimuli from the surgical area are important in mediating the postoperative changes in LDH and CPK, whereas factors other than neurogenic stimuli or adrenal hormones are responsible for the postoperative changes in bilirubin.
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PMID:Influence of epidural analgesia on postoperative changes in various serum enzyme patterns and serum bilirubin. 732 21

The present study was performed to measure the uptake of main renal cortical fuel substrates (glutamine and lactate) and the release of the main renal cortical products (ammonia and glucose) by cortical slices from gentamicin-treated rats. Experiments were done in 2 groups of female Wistar rats (250 g): In gentamicin group (n = 13), rats were injected s.c. with gentamicin-sulphate 100 mg/Kg body wt/day for 5 days. Control rats (n = 13) received isotonic saline. After anesthesia and blood sampling, renal cortical slices were obtained and incubated with L-glutamine and/or lactate at 1 or 5 mM concentration, containing L-glutamate and/or pyruvate at 0.1 or 0.5 mM. Creatinine clearance was reduced to a 50% in gentamicin-treated rats. In addition these animals showed a sharp increase in urinary excretion of N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase and alkaline phosphatase. Light microscopy examination revealed extensive cell necrosis and tubular obstruction of the proximal tubules in kidneys of rats injected with gentamicin. The renal cortical gentamicin concentration of rats injected with gentamicin was 310 +/- 43 mu/g, whereas it was undetectable in control rats. Cortical slices from gentamicin-treated rats, compared to control ones, showed a reduced production of ammonia and glucose, without differences in glutamine or lactate extraction. These alterations can be explained by both the increased rate of anabolic reactions to recover cell damage associated to renal failure, as well as by a direct effect of gentamicin on the rate of carboxylation reactions.
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PMID:Effect of gentamicin treatment on glutamine and lactate metabolism by the renal cortex of the rat. 769 Dec 12

The pathophysiology of secondary osteoarthritis remains largely obscure. Our attention has been drawn to Kashin-Beck disease (KBD), which has been attributed to Se deficiency. To obtain information regarding the prevention, prediction of progression, and treatment of this condition, we performed histological and biochemical studies on bone and articular cartilage specimens obtained from rats fed a low-Se diet. A low-Se diet was prepared and fed to Wistar rats for 3-11 mo, after which the rats were killed under general anesthesia, and their articular cartilages were studied microscopically and electron microscopically. The bone mineral density (BMD) of the femur was determined by the microdensitometry method and ash weight. In addition, serum Se, Ca, P, Alk Phos, T3, T4, and urinary Se were measured. In the low-Se group, impaired weight gain was observed from the 5th mo, and head alopecia was found in 60% of the animals. Microscopically, no clear changes in the articular chondrocytes were apparent, whereas with the electron microscope, chondrocytes in the deep layer showed degeneration of nuclei and endoplasmic reticular ballooning. From the 5th mo, a decrease in BMD (ash weight) was noted. Serum Se concentrations, alkaline phosphatase activity, and urine Se concentrations were decreased in the Se-deficient rats, whereas serum Ca, P, T3, and T4 values did not differ from those of a control group. Also, a decrease in sulfotransferase activity, which is involved in transfer in the process of synthesis of glycosaminoglycan, which is a proteoglycan carbohydrate chain, was found.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Low-selenium diet, bone, and articular cartilage in rats. 770 1

A general anaesthetic drug that fulfils requirements for use under difficult circumstances is the inhalation agent halothane-diethyl-ether (HE) azeotrope. Although both halothane and diethyl ether have been described in detail, their effect on the liver when given together as an azeotrope has not been systematically characterised. The effect on liver function was evaluated and compared with the effects of halothane anaesthesia (H) and spinal anaesthesia with tetracaine (S), the last named serving as controls. The series consisted of 33 healthy men (ASA 1-2) receiving no medication and scheduled for inguinal hernia repair. The patients were randomly allocated to receive HE, H or S. The following parameters were estimated the day before surgery and on the first postoperative day: liver cell metabolism (bile acids, unconjugated bilirubin), cell integrity (aminotransferases), synthesizing capacity (Prothrombin complex), cholestasis (conjugated bilirubin, alkaline phosphatase, gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase), and global liver function (chenodeoxycholic load test). No major differences emerged between the groups. Unconjugated bilirubin was increased in all groups. Prothrombin complex activity was reduced in all groups. Conjugated bilirubin was increased in the H group. The oral bile acid load test and the fasting bile acid were unaltered by anaesthesia in all groups. No major impact on liver cell function was seen in the early post-operative period after HE azeotrope anaesthesia. The findings support our view that HE azeotrope could be considered as an alternative anaesthetic agent under field conditions.
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PMID:Liver function and halothane-diethyl-ether azeotrope anaesthesia. Re-evaluation of an obsolete drug with special reference to early postoperative effects. 772 82

Hepatobiliary dysfunction in patients receiving nutrition support is frequent. Other reasons for elevated enzyme levels including drugs, recent anesthesia and surgery or sepsis often coexist. Liver test abnormalities in adults are usually milder than in children and frequently self-limited and are 10 times more likely to occur with total parenteral nutrition (TPN) than tube enteral nutrition. Patients on short-term TPN usually have mild-to-moderate elevations in transaminase and alkaline phosphatase levels and steatosis or portal triaditis on biopsy. Patients who are infected while on TPN are at greater risk of developing steatosis and intrahepatic cholestasis. Strategies to correct abnormalities include alteration of the caloric mix in the TPN, cyclic infusions, metronidazole, enteral nutrition and inclusion of L-glutamine in the TPN formula. Patients on long-term home parenteral nutrition may develop persistent elevations in liver tests and steatohepatitis. Both acalculus and calculus cholecystitis occur with increased frequency in patients on long-term TPN. Biliary sludge precedes calcium bilirubinate stones: predisclosing factors include nil per os, prior ileal resection and use of narcotics or anticholinergics.
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PMID:Hepatobiliary complications in adults receiving nutrition support. 785 Sep 98


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