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

A 22-year-old man with Marfan's syndrome and a history of antinuclear antibody-positive hepatitis died 25 days after undergoing cardiac valve replacement surgery for mitral valve prolapse. Giant cell myocarditis was found at autopsy. The multinucleated giant cells were shown by immunoperoxidase techniques to contain lysozyme, but not myosin or creatine phosphokinase, suggesting that they were derived from macrophage, rather than myocyte, precursors.
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PMID:Giant cell myocarditis after mitral valve replacement: case report and studies of the nature of giant cells. 672 75

Giant cell myocarditis (GCM) as a distinct disease entity has been questioned. The superficial morphologic resemblance to cardiac sarcoidosis and incomplete histopathologic assessment of extracardiac organ systems in reported cases has suggested that GCM represents a predominant cardiac manifestation of generalized sarcoidosis. The morphologic and immunocytochemical features at autopsy of this rare disorder were seen in a 15-year-old boy. All other organs were free of granulomatous inflammation. Transition from normal myocardial fibers to giant cells was observed, without a limiting plasma membrane between the two different aspects of the fiber. Immunocytochemistry for cytoplasmic muramidase (CM) showed CM in neutrophils and tissue macrophages. Cytoplasmic muramidase was distinctly absent from the characteristic giant cells. The classification of GCM as a disease separate from generalized sarcoidosis may be justified.
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PMID:Giant cell myocarditis. 698 38

Giant cell myocarditis (GCM) is a rare condition whose histologic hallmark, the multinucleate giant cell, is of debated origin (monocytic v myogenic). We report the case of a 46-year-old woman with a previous diagnosis of ulcerative colitis who rapidly deteriorated and died as the result of refractory ventricular tachyarrhythmias. Postmortem examination showed a diffuse infiltration of the myocardium by round cells and multinucleate giant cells. Immunohistochemically, round cells were demonstrated to be T lymphocytes admixed with monocytes. Multinucleate giant cells expressed monocytic markers (MAC 387, lysozyme) and were negative for muscle markers (actin, desmin, myoglobin). This case illustrates the monocytic and macrophagic nature of multinucleate giant cells and lends support to the autoimmune hypothesis of GCM by the concurrence of the latter with ulcerative colitis.
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PMID:Giant cell myocarditis: monocytic immunophenotype of giant cells in a case associated with ulcerative colitis. 782 9