Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.2.1.17 (lysozyme)
21,489 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Serum angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) was studied in 51 patients with early or newly diagnosed sarcoidosis. Only 45% of these patients had increased ACE activity when their diagnosis was established, which diminishes the diagnostic value of this enzyme measurement. On the other hand, ACE accurately reflected disease activity, and it proved a useful tool for assessing of need for corticosteroid treatment. Patients with acute sarcoidosis associated with erythema nodosum (EN) had low ACE activity compared with the other patients with active, but less acute disease. Serum ACE was not significantly correlated with blood lymphocytes or the immunoglobulins, but there was a positive correlation between the enzyme and serum lysozyme, which strengthens the hypothesis of both enzymes being produced by the epithelioid cells of sarcoid granulomas.
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PMID:Angiotensin-converting enzyme. II. Serum activity in early and newly diagnosed sarcoidosis. 22 Jul 5

The natural history and haematological features of 18 patients with a chronic form of myelomonocytic leukaemia are described. The majority were elderly and, in this series, females predominated. Haematological prodomata, such as unexplained monocytosis, leucopenia, or thrombocytopenia were common, and the clinical onset was insidious. Splenomegaly was variable but tended to increase as the disease progressed. Anaemia was usually less than in the acute disease, unless compounded by iron deficiency. The blood film typically showed a mixed monocytosis and granulocytosis, cells in both lines showing abnormalities. 'Paramyeloid' cells, appearing in Romanowsky stained films intermediate between myelocytes and monocytes, were characteristic, although cytochemical and electron microscopical analysis suggests that these cells may be allotted to one or other cell line. The marrow aspirate was characteristically hypercellular, showed granulocytic hyperplasia, and, in contrast to the well-differentiated blood picture, the proportion of poorly differentiated cells, including blasts, was high. Serum lysozyme levels were usually raised. Five of the 18 cases survived more than 5 years, while 10 lived 2 years or longer. The morphological and clinical features form part of a spectrum including acute myelomonocytic leukaemia, into which several of the patients transformed. Recognition of the syndrome is important because the patients are probably best managed without intensive chemotherapy.
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PMID:Chronic myelomonocytic leukaemia. 105 74

On the assumption that increased urinary lysozyme concentration (;lysozymuria') indicates tubular proteinuria and therefore impaired tubular function, urinary lysozyme has been estimated in acute disorders where transient disturbances of renal function might be expected, in cases diagnosed clinically as extrarenal uraemia, and in a few examples of acute renal disease. Reversible lysozymuria occurred with hypokalaemia, postoperative ;collapse', electrolyte depletion, severe extrarenal infection, acute pyelonephritis, the nephrotic syndrome, after a few apparently uncomplicated surgical operations, and very transiently after ventricular fibrillation abolished by DC shock. There was no lysozymuria with severe uraemic heart failure, aspirin and paracetamol poisoning, or severe jaundice, nor in two cases of acute glomerulonephritis. Although lysozymuria may occasionally be useful in the clinical diagnosis of acutely disordered renal function, the results suggest that its value is limited; on the other hand, they have provided information on renal pathophysiology in acute disease.
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PMID:Lysozymuria and acute disorders of renal function. 470 97