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)

We measured adenosine deaminase (ADA), lysozyme, fibronectin and carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) in the pleural fluid of tuberculous and carcinomatous pleural effusion in order to discriminate these two groups. Tuberculous pleural effusion had significantly higher levels of ADA and lysozyme than did carcinomatous effusion. When ADA activity of more than 33 IU/l is considered, diagnostic tests of tuberculous effusions showed a sensitivity of 100%, specificity of 95% and accuracy of 96%. A pleural fluid/serum ADA ratio (pl-ADA/s-ADA) above 1.1 was found in 100% of tuberculous and in 53% of carcinomatous effusions (sensitivity 100%, specificity 47%, diagnostic accuracy 70%). A lysozyme level above 12 micrograms/ml, selected as the discriminating limit, was found in 100% of tuberculous and in 17% of carcinomatous effusions (sensitivity 100%, specificity 83%, diagnostic accuracy 88%). Pleural fluid/serum lysozyme ratio (PL/SL) was also valuable in the discrimination of these two groups. When the cut-off level of 1.2 was considered, diagnostic tests of tuberculous effusions showed a sensitivity of 100%, specificity of 88% and accuracy of 93%, respectively. The mean fibronectin concentration in pleural fluid with tuberculous effusion was significantly higher than that in carcinomatous effusion, but there was a marked overlap between these two groups. On the other hand, CEA was significantly higher in carcinomatous effusions than in tuberculous effusions. At a cut-off level of 5 ng/ml, 53% of patients with carcinomatous effusion showed elevated pleural fluid CEA levels, while none of the tuberculous effusion did (sensitivity 53%, specificity 100%, diagnostic accuracy 65%).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Discrimination of tuberculous from carcinomatous pleural effusion by biochemical markers: adenosine deaminase, lysozyme, fibronectin and carcinoembryonic antigen. 281 Sep 21

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.
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PMID:Lysozyme (muramidase) in pleural effusions and serum. 713 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.
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PMID:Rapid automated determination of adenosine deaminase and lysozyme for differentiating tuberculous and nontuberculous pleural effusions. 890 96