Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.2.1.17 (
lysozyme
)
21,489
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Lysozyme content was measured in the plasma and pleural fluid of 110 patients with pleural effusions of various causes. The concentration of pleural fluid
lysozyme
was significantly higher (P less than .001) in patients with tuberculous pleurisy than in those with primary pulmonary carcinoma, metastatic carcinoma of the lung, connective tissue disease, nonspecific pleurisy, or congestive heart failure. Tuberculous patients also had a significantly higher (P less than .001) pleural fluid-to-plasma
lysozyme
ratio than did the other patients. Plasma
lysozyme
activity did not differ significantly among the various patient groups. Lysozyme was identified immunohistochemically in epithelioid cell granulomas in tuberculosis, in activated macrophages in lymph nodes adjacent to tuberculous lesions, and in granulocytes in pleural
empyema
. No
lysozyme
was detected in neoplastic cells in pulmonary carcinoma. The results show that the determination of pleural fluid
lysozyme
is a simple, fast method for obtaining corroborative information in the differential diagnosis of tuberculous pleurisy.
...
PMID:Pleural fluid lysozyme in human disease. 76 Jun 86
We determined the levels of
lysozyme
in pleural fluid and serum in 141 patients with the following different causes for their pleural effusions: tuberculosis; neoplasias; transudates; parapneumonic, not complicated; empyemas; and miscellaneous. The
lysozyme
level of the pleural fluid and the ratio of that level over the serum level of
lysozyme
(PL/SL ratio) was meaningfully increased in patients with
empyema
(p less than 0.01). The groups with tuberculous and neoplastic effusions showed significant differences in the PL/SL ratio (p less than 0.01). The existence of a raised PL/SL ratio suggested important local synthesis of
lysozyme
, and it came up in empyemas and tuberculosis, unlike the other groups. Excluding the patients with empyemas, a PL/SL ratio of 1.2 showed a sensitivity of 100 percent, specificity of 94.9 percent, positive predictive value of 94.7 percent, negative predictive value of 100 percent, and accuracy of 97.3 percent for the diagnosis of tuberculous pleural effusion. All of this suggests that the determination of the
lysozyme
level can be an easy method of great usefulness in the initial diagnosis of pleural effusions.
...
PMID:Meaning and diagnostic value of determining the lysozyme level of pleural fluid. 381 12
Endolymphatic infusions of an antibacterial complex (antibiotic--
lysozyme
--proteinase inhibitor) resulted in recovery of 92,6% of patients after a complex treatment of diffuse peritonitis and sepsis. Gauze-sorbent tampons used in
empyema
of pleura give rapid cleaning of the cavity walls from pyo-necrotic masses and decreased the activity of the inflammatory process.
...
PMID:[Administration of medications via a lymphatic vessel in the treatment of diffuse peritonitis and sepsis]. 399 8
The authors evaluated the usefulness of paired pleural fluid and serum
lysozyme
determination in the differential diagnosis of pleurisies in 118 patients. Lysozyme activity of tuberculous effusions was found significantly higher (P less than 0.001) than that of effusions due to malignancy or heart failure, but considerable overlap of the individual values was observed. All patients with tuberculous pleurisy or tuberculous
empyema
, as well as a group of patients with suspected tuberculous effusion, had pleural fluid to serum
lysozyme
ratio of 1.0 or greater. In the remaining groups, only three patients, one with malignancy, one with lupus erythematosus, and one with sarcoidosis, exceeded this value. Their results suggest that pleural fluid to serum
lysozyme
ratio can be applied effectively in the differential diagnosis of tuberculous pleurisy.
...
PMID:Lysozyme (muramidase) in pleural effusions and serum. 713 19
We compared the parameters pleural adenosine deaminase (PADA, determined in 405 patients), the PADA/serum ADA ratio (P/SADA; 276 cases), pleural
lysozyme
(PLYS, 276 cases), the PLYS/serum LYS ratio (P/SLYS; 276 cases), and pleural interferon gamma (IFN, 145 cases) regarding their ability to differentiate tuberculous pleural effusions from others. The 405 pleural effusions were classified by previously established criteria as tuberculous (91), neoplastic (110), parapneumonic (58), empyemas (10), transudates (88), or miscellaneous (48). The intermean differences between the tuberculous group and each of the others were statistically significant for all five parameters (p < 0.01 for PLYS and P/SLYS with respect to the
empyema
group; p < 0.001 otherwise), except for PADA and P/SADA with respect to the
empyema
group. All the tuberculous pleurisy cases had PADA values of 47 U/L or more, as compared to only 5 percent of the other cases (sensitivity, 100 percent; specificity, 95 percent). P/SADA was above 1.5 in 85.7 percent of tuberculous effusions and 11 percent of the others (sensitivity, 85.7 percent; specificity, 89 percent). PLYS, with a diagnostic threshold of 15 g/ml, had a sensitivity of 85.7 percent and a specificity of 61.6 percent; P/SLYS, with a threshold of 1.1, had a sensitivity of 67.3 percent and a specificity of 90.3 percent; and IFN, with a threshold of 140 pg/ml, had a sensitivity of 94.2 percent and a specificity of 91.8 percent. The lowest misclassification rate was achieved by PADA, with statistically significant differences (p < 0.001) with respect to P/SADA, PLYS, and P/SLYS, but not with respect to IFN. The only significant pairwise correlations among these parameters were between P/SLYS and PADA and between P/SLYS and P/SADA. We conclude that PADA and IFN are useful parameters for early diagnosis of tuberculous pleurisy, and that the other parameters considered have no advantages over PADA and IFN for this purpose (though the high specificity of P/SLYS may be noted).
...
PMID:Diagnosis of tuberculous pleurisy using the biologic parameters adenosine deaminase, lysozyme, and interferon gamma. 820 19
The catalytic concentration of pleural adenosine deaminase (ADA) and the ratio of pleural
lysozyme
(PL) to serum
lysozyme
(SL) were measured in consecutive patients (49 tuberculous and 179 nontuberculous) with two automated procedures in a Hitachi 717 analyzer. Using sensitivity and specificity curves, we established cutoff values at 33 U/L for ADA and 1.7 for the PL/SL ratio. The sensitivity of ADA activities for tuberculous effusion was 90%, specificity 85%. Combining ADA with the PL/SL ratio enhanced specificity to 99%. However, high values for ADA and
lysozyme
ratios are not, alone or in combination, sensitive or specific enough to replace pleural biopsy or culture of pleural fluid for the diagnosis of tuberculous
empyema
.
...
PMID:Rapid automated determination of adenosine deaminase and lysozyme for differentiating tuberculous and nontuberculous pleural effusions. 890 96
Lysozyme level was measured in the fluid and serum of 42 tuberculous (25 pleural, 11 ascites and 6 pericardial) and 29 non-tuberculous (5 malignant, 9
empyema
thoracis, 10 transudative ascites and 5 pyopericardium) effusions. The mean fluid
lysozyme
level was significantly raised in tuberculous pleural, ascites, and pericardial effusions in comparison to malignant pleural (p <0.001), transudative ascites (p < 0.001), and pyopericardium (p < 0.02) cases, respectively. The mean fluid/serum
lysozyme
ratio did not differ significantly between tuberculous and their corresponding non-tuberculous effusions. The confirmed tuberculous pleural effusion patients had significantly higher mean fluid
lysozyme
level and fluid/serum
lysozyme
ratio when compared with clinical cases (p < 0.05). The cut-off fluid
lysozyme
level of > or = 50/UI(-1) and fluid/serum
lysozyme
ratio of > or = 1.1 were considered for the diagnosis of tuberculous effusions; the sensitivity and specificity of fluid
lysozyme
and fluid/serum
lysozyme
ratios were 100, 100 per cent, and 97.6, 33.3 per cent, respectively, on excluding the patients with purulent effusions. A significant correlation was observed between the fluid and serum
lysozyme
levels in tuberculous effusions (r = 0.39,p < 0.01). Thus, fluid
lysozyme
was found to be a better and reliable test than fluid/serum
lysozyme
ratio for the diagnosis of tuberculous effusions in children.
...
PMID:Lysozyme levels for the diagnosis of tuberculous effusions in children. 1107 40