Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.2.1.108 (lactase)
2,133 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Screening for cystic fibrosis (CF) in newborns is desirable, and efforts should continue in establishing a system of easily available, reliable, simple, and inexpensive tests. In addition to the Boehringer-Mannheim (BM) test for the detection of albumin, we propose the assay for lactase and beta-D-fucosidase in meconium. These latter two enzymes are present in the meconium of babies with CF and absent in meconium of most healthy babies. In a mass screening program for CF involving 20,182 specimens of meconium using only the BM strip, we found 46 positive results. Twenty-nine specimens came from infants with CF, six of whom had meconium ileus. Seventeen specimens yielded false-positive results by the BM test. Eleven of these would have been excluded by the addition of the lactase and beta-D-fucoside assay, thus reducing the false-positive test results by nearly 61%. In a comparative study of the three methods, the lactase and beta-D-fucosidase yielded 1.2% false-positives when examined independently. Performance of these two assays may allow greater specificity in diagnosis when used in addition to the BM test.
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PMID:Studies in meconium. An approach to screening tests to detect cystic fibrosis. 10 86

The paper concerns the results of clinical trials of new specialized foods--protein, defatted and fat enpits as well as low lactose milk mixtures, which were used in dietotherapy of sick children with different disease entities (hypothrophy, bronchopulmonary abnormalities, emaciation pre- and postoperatively, mucoviscidosis, Laurence-Moon-Bardte-Biedle's syndrome, Marfan's syndrome, galactosemia, lactase deficiency). The diets including new therapeutic foods were shown to exert high therapeutic effects, that gave grounds for the methodological recommendations for using them in pediatrics to be given.
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PMID:[Clinical effectiveness of the therapeutic nutrition of sick children using enteral feeding preparations and low-lactose mixtures]. 11 35

The disaccharidase activities in small intestinal biopsies were related to the morphology of the mucosa and the ages of 63 patients with cystic fibrosis and 177 healthy control subjects of Caucasian origin. In patients with CF and in the healthy control subjects under 5 years of age with normal intestinal mucosa, no low lactase activity was found. In those patients with CF who were over 5 years of age, one group had high and one group had low lactase activity, as occurs in healthy Caucasian control subjects of the same age. This finding supports the view that in patients with CF, lactase deficiency is not related to the disease entity. In patients with or without CF who had the same degree of mucosal atrophy, the decrease of disaccharidase activities followed the same pattern, indicating that enzyme activities are affected to the same extent by the damage of the mucosa. In patients with CF with pancreatic insufficiency, the disaccharidase activities were significantly (P less than 0.001) higher when compared to those in control subjects of the same age and ethnic group, although the increase was not uniform in all patients with cystic fibrosis.
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PMID:Disaccharidase activities in small intestinal mucosa in patients with cystic fibrosis. 41 96

Meconium ileus represents the earliest clinical manifestation of cystic fibrosis. The differences found in the composition and amount of protein, mucoprotein, mucopolysaccharides, and reducing sugars in meconium from newborns with cystic fibrosis might be of significance relative to the pathogenesis and early diagnosis of this disease. We studied the enzymatic activity of disaccharidases (lactase, sucrase, maltase, and palatinase) in meconium of infants with cystic fibrosis and controls. We found an increase in the specific activity of these enzymes in the meconium from infants with cystic fibrosis as compared to the specific activity in meconium from normal infants. The increase in the activities, expressed as micromols per gram of protein per minute was: lactase, 100 times higher; sucrase, 18 times; maltase, 4.8 times, and palatinase, 8.9 times.
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PMID:Studies in meconium: disaccharidase activities in meconium from cystic fibrosis patients and controls. 119 37

Thirty-eight specimens obtained by jejunal biopsy from 22 children suffering from mucoviscidosis were examined by histochemical techniques. In 27% of the patients the findings were within normal limits. In 18% of cases, associated coeliacal sprue was disclosed. The remaining cases displayed slight morphological abnormalities associated with trehalase and/or lactase deficiency, and in 41% there was hypersecretion of viscous mucus filling up dilated crypts and adhering to the surface of villi. The findings as observed in enterobiopsis are not pathognostic of mucoviscidosis. They however, should make one to think of it, particularly if trehalase and/or lactase deficiency is found associated with hypersecretion of viscous mucus and an almost normal morphological appearance. Neither normal findings nor that of coeliacal sprue exclude the diagnosis of mucoviscidosis. It appears that malabsorption in mucoviscidosis is not only pancreatogenic; the intestinal mucosa may be contributory to a various degree as well.
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PMID:[Jejunal mucosa in children with mucoviscidosis]. 120 86

Data are presented on scanning electron microscopy (SEM) on small intestinal biopsies of children with chronic diarrhea. In particular, there were 230 patients aged 3 months to 13 years with the following diagnoses: chronic nonspecific diarrhea, cow's milk protein intolerance, soy protein intolerance, giardiasis, cystic fibrosis, gluten-sensitive enteropathy, isolated lactase deficiency, isolated sucrase-isomaltase lactase deficiency, microvillus inclusion disease, rotavirus enteritis, protracted diarrhea of infancy, chylomicron retention disease, visceral myopathy and villous asthenia. Examination of biopsied intestinal mucosa by SEM has yielded important new information and insights on structural pathology and ultrastructural topography. Many of the observed changes helped to better understand the pathophysiology of some of the diarrheal disorders. SEM was also able to detect new features such as mycoplasma-like microorganisms and the absence of the glycocalyx. To adequately assess small bowel mucosal pathology at the ultrastructural level, scanning electron microscopy is an indispensable tool.
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PMID:The scanning electron microscope: how valuable in the evaluation of small bowel mucosal pathology in chronic childhood diarrhea? 182 28

Intestinal disaccharidases in amniotic fluid were studied in 41 pregnancies with a recurrence risk for cystic fibrosis (CF). In 11 out of 13 pregnancies with CF fetuses the maltase and sucrase activities were either below the control range (8 cases) or below the 10th percentile of control values (3 cases). Trehalase and lactase were slightly less informative indicators of CF. Of the other 28 pregnancies 3 had low amniotic fluid activities of several intestinal enzymes and were terminated, 12 resulted in the birth of a healthy child and 13 are continuing. The findings in fetal CF suggest an impairment of the defaecation of intestinal contents into the amniotic fluid. Reduced or low amniotic fluid disaccharidase activities were also found in other fetal disorders with demonstrated or presumed intestinal anomalies: e.g. anal atresia (2 cases), anencephaly (3 our of the 7 cases), trisomy 13 (5 cases), trisomy 18 (3 of the 5 cases) and trisomy 21 (19 of the 22 cases). Reduced amniotic fluid disaccharidase activities, although not specific for CF, are highly informative in pregnancies at high risk for CF. Using the 10th percentile of the normal range for amniotic fluid disaccharidase activities as an action line, the sensitivity of CF detection is estimated at 80 to 90 per cent, which could in high risk pregnancies reduce the risk of having another affected child from 1 in 4 to 1 in 20.
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PMID:Amniotic fluid disaccharidases in the prenatal detection of cystic fibrosis. 399 66

Invasive tests to diagnose patients with gastrointestinal disease are rapidly being replaced by procedures which enable organ function to be assessed by monitoring the product of a metabolic reaction in readily available materials such as breath, blood, and urine. Examples of these approaches that will be assessed in this review include the hydrogen breath test for lactase deficiency, radioactive carbon dioxide breath measurements to test for fat digestion and absorption, and tests of pancreatic function based upon synthetic substrates from which fluorescein or para-aminobenzoic acid can be liberated by pancreas-specific enzymes. Significant advances have been made in improving the organ sensitivity of enzyme determinations. The determination of amylase isoenzymes has been less useful than the measurement of immunoreactive trypsin; this latter enzyme is greatly elevated in the blood of neonates with cystic fibrosis, whereas serum levels are greatly depressed in cystic fibrosis patients with pancreatic insufficiency as well as in most patients with steatorrhea due to chronic pancreatitis. Many of these tests are now becoming standard procedures in the investigation of infants with gastrointestinal disease.
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PMID:The noninvasive biochemical diagnosis of gastrointestinal disease, with special reference to children. 621 Jan 70

Screening of newborn infants could provide information needed to evaluate the effects of early treatment on the course and prognosis of cystic fibrosis (CF). Two procedures of screening meconium for CF were compared: increased albumin levels, detected by a commercial test strip; and increased lactase activity, detected by glucose production after incubation of meconium with lactose. Specimens positive by the lactase test were retested for albumin. Low-birth-weight infants accounted for more than half the positive test results with both procedures. Sweat chloride measurements were carried out only on infants whose meconium specimens had albumin concentration greater than 12 mg/g (wet weight), measured by radial immunodiffusion. Twelve infants with CF were identified through screening, six while testing 44,816 specimens by lactase activity test. Three additional infants with CF were missed because meconium specimens were negative to both tests.
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PMID:Elevated meconium lactase activity. Its use as a screening test for cystic fibrosis. 677 25

Recent antigliadin antibody (AGA) determination has become an important diagnostic tool in coeliac disease (CD). Although this test has high sensibility for the disease, it is less specific, especially for IgG class, because of its having been found in some acute and chronic common intestinal childhood diseases. We studied the behaviour of AGA, IgA and IgG, in 234 children affected by various gastrointestinal diseases, comparing the results with those obtained in 125 coeliac children and 788 normal children. The intestinal diseases were as follows: irritable bowel syndrome, cow's milk protein intolerance, acute infectious diarrhoea, parasitosis, lactase deficiency, recurrent abdominal pain, cystic fibrosis, chronic constipation, gastroesophageal reflux, intestinal lymphangiectasia, chronic intractable diarrhoea and nodular lymphoid hyperplasia. Our results showed that while AGA-IgA were absent in all children studied, with the exception of 3 cases of acute diarrhoea, a moderate percentage of AGA-IgG was observed in subjects with cow's milk protein intolerance, acute diarrhoea, irritable bowel syndrome, lactase deficiency, chronic intractable diarrhoea and in a low percentage of children with parasitosis, intestinal lymphangiectasia and nodular lymphoid hyperplasia. There was no antibody movement in subjects with cystic fibrosis, gastroesophageal reflux, recurrent abdominal pains and chronic constipation. The different behaviour of the two antibody classes could be explained by the fact that AGA-IgG were detected in diseases where scattered areas of mucosal damage could allow the permeability of the macromolecules inducing passage of gliadin through the mucosal barrier and immune system-induced antibody stimulation.
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PMID:[The predictive value of antigliadin antibodies (AGA) in the diagnosis of non-celiac gastrointestinal disease in children]. 834 Dec 33


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