Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.4.15.1 (ACE)
18,300 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Disturbances of neurovascular function in the extremities may occur in patients with diabetes mellitus, exposure to toxic substances and chronic exposure to vibrating hand tools, as well as in Raynaud's phenomena. In these conditions symptoms of paraesthesia, finger numbness and blanching occur, so nerve conduction studies, vibration and temperature threshold measurements and neurovascular function tests are used for objective assessment of neurological dysfunction. The aim of the present study was to examine some factors which may confound quantitative neuro-vascular function measurements if used to assess neuropathy in diabetics. All subjects were consenting volunteers without exposure to known neurotoxic chemicals. The 5 groups were (a) healthy non-diabetic subjects not exposed to vibration (n = 10, mean age 52.3 yrs) (b) 2 insulin dependent and 8 non-insulin dependent diabetic subjects with a mean of 6 years treatment (n = 10, mean age 55.7 yrs) (c) maintenance employees exposed to high frequency pneumatic hand tools (n = 10, mean age 52.2 yrs) (d) subjects who were not diabetic or exposed to vibrating tools, but were being treated with the ACE-inhibitor enalapril 20 mg daily for hypertension (n = 5, mean age 54 yrs) (e) subjects who had smoked more than 10 cigarettes daily for at least 15 yrs (n = 10, mean age 51 yrs). Neurovascular tests included axon reflex responses measured by laser Doppler velocimeter evoked on the dorsum of the finger by iontophoresis of acetylcholine 16 mC in a circumferential chamber: cutaneous microvascular dilator responses to endothelial stimulation by iontophoretic application of the muscarinic agonist pilocarpine 16 mC and to direct nitrodilator sodium nitroprusside 16 mC. The skin temperature of the digits was held between 33 degrees and 34 degrees C during testing and dilator responses were measured as flux change by on-line computer analysis using 'Perisoft'. There was a significant reduction (P < 0.05) in the neurovascular responses of both diabetics and vibration--exposed subjects to acetylcholine and, in the case of vibration-exposed subjects, to pilocarpine, but nitroprusside responses were not significantly different. Our findings of reductions in neurovascular responses in diabetics and in subjects exposed to higher frequency vibration is consistent with recent epidemiological findings. Furthermore, subjects treated with an ACE-inhibitor (enalapril) showed significant reduction in acetylcholine-evoked axon reflex responses, while the test group of smokers showed a significant reduction in their dilator response to pilocarpine.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Confounding factors in non-invasive tests of neurovascular function in diabetes mellitus. 134 58

Spinal neurosarcoidosis is rare (0.43 p. 100 of all sarcoidosis) and can be the initial manifestation of the disease. A 43-year-old right handed African man developed a progressive dorsal neck pain, slowly worsened paresthesia weakness in the legs and a gait disturbance. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan of the cervical and thoracic spinal cord (sagittal T(1)- weighted image) revealed diffuse enlargement of the cord from C2 to T7 with intense intramedullary enhancement from C2 to T3 after administration of contrast material on sagittal T(1)- weighted image. Cranial MRI scan was normal. Radiographs of the chest revealed bilateral symmetric hilar mediastinal lymphadenopathy with no pulmonary infiltrates. Bronchial biopsy demonstrated non caseating granulomas with langerhans giant cells. The serum angiotensin converting enzyme level was elevated. The patient received corticosteroid with good progressive response. His neurologic symptoms improved markedly and twenty months post-treatment MRI showed no abnormality on enhanced T(1)- weighted images. Two years later he had no relapse. Only 6 to 10 p. 100 of patients with neurosarcoidosis have spinal cord involvement, which may account for the first clinical manifestation of the disease. Most patients with neurosarcoidosis have associated extraneurologic abnormalities. The diagnosis is supported usually by extraneurologic biopsies. Spinal cord biopsy needs to be considered on case-by-case basis.
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PMID:[Spinal cord involvement revealing systemic sarcoidosis]. 1103 20

Low-density lipoprotein (LDL) apheresis can drastically reduce atherogenic lipoproteins in coronary patients in whom LDL and lipoprotein (a) (Lp[a]) cannot be sufficiently reduced by conservative therapy. LDL and Lp(a) adsorption by polyacrylate/polyacrylamide (DALI) is the simplest procedure for clinical LDL apheresis to date. DALI was first applied in patients in 1994 and introduced into clinical routine in 1996. It is the first LDL-hemoperfusion system, i.e., it adsorbs LDL and Lp(a) directly from whole blood. This markedly simplifies the extracorporeal circuit, the handling of the system, and reduces significantly staff time and, especially at higher blood flow rates, treatment time. Its features are high selectivity and capacity of lipoprotein removal (maximum about 8 g low-density lipoprotein cholesterol per session). Using citrate anticoagulation, good biocompatibility is evidenced by the lack of cell losses, hemolysis, thrombotic events, and complement activation. Some clotting factors of the intrinsic system are also adsorbed. There is significant bradykinin activation that, however, does not cause problems in most patients if angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor medication is avoided. In a first long-term study, 93% of sessions were uneventful. Major side effects were citrate-induced paresthesias (1.3%) and hypotension (0.8%). To date, more than 25,000 DALI sessions have been performed all over the world.
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PMID:Direct adsorption of lipoproteins from whole blood by DALI apheresis: technique and effects. 1172 7

Peripheral nerve involvement is a rare, yet treatable neurological manifestation of sarcoidosis. Most patients respond well to corticosteroids, but relapses are common and the long-term prognosis remains unpredictable. We present a patient with an asymmetrical neurological presentation of previously undiagnosed sarcoidosis. She presented with paresthesias and predominantly distal extremity weakness. Other possible causes of neuropathy were ruled out and she was found to have an elevated serum ACE level. A nerve/lip biopsy demonstrated non-caseating granulomas consistent with sarcoid. Her clinical outcome was favorable after initiating treatment with high dose oral prednisone.
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PMID:Mononeuritis multiplex secondary to sarcoidosis. 1570 31

The most common causes of chronic cough in nonsmokers are postnasal drip syndrome, asthma, and gastroesophageal reflux disease. Drugs are also important in the etiology of resistant cough. Most common drugs inducing cough are the ACE inhibitors. Many drugs other than ACE inhibitors can also cause dry cough and one among them is topiramate. It is a new generation, efficacy-proved antiepileptic drug that is used widely for migraine prophylaxis in many countries. Most common adverse events of topiramate are paresthesia, cognitive symptoms, fatigue, insomnia, nausea, loss of apetite, anxiety, and dizziness. There is only one case report about topiramate associated cough in the literature. The present report refers to a patient, presenting with cough who is on topiramate treatment for migraine prophylaxis.
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PMID:As a rare cause of drug-induced cough: topiramate. 2242 60

The accurate identification of compartment syndrome in the emergency department is essential to timely treatment and prevention of long-term sequela. Recognizing compartment syndrome is not straightforward, especially in the pediatric population. In addition to communication barriers that exist with children, the classic signs of pain, pallor, paresthesia, paralysis, and pulselessness are not always present, making its diagnosis a challenge. We report a case of a child with compartment syndrome to the left hand due to compression from an ACE wrap. The existing literature on compartment syndrome in children is reviewed.
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PMID:A swollen hand with blisters: a case of compartment syndrome in a child. 2603 97