Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.21.1 (chymotrypsin)
10,938 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Chronic pancreatitis has been reported to be associated with an increased secretion of calcium in pancreatic juice. To determine whether estimation of duodenal calcium may be useful for diagnosing chronic pancreatitis, we compared duodenal calcium output in patients with chronic pancreatitis and in subjects without pancreatic disease, during intravenous infusion of secretion alone, with calcium, or with cholecystokinin-pancreozymin (CCK-PZ). Duodenal calcium output increased during infusion of both calcium and CCK-PZ to a similar extent in chronic pancreatitis and controls. Overall, duodenal output of chymotrypsin was markedly lower in chronic pancreatitis; however, chymotrypsin output increased in response to both intravenous calcium and CCK-PZ in both groups. Bilirubin output increased in both groups during calcium infusion, but this increase was significantly reduced in chronic pancreatitis; in contrast, CCK-PZ caused a similar increase in both groups. The high calcium output observed in hypercalcemia in the presence of low enzyme output suggests increased pancreatic secretion of enzyme-independent calcium in chronic pancreatitis. However, the difference is obscured by biliary calcium, which is secreted in much higher concentrations. Thus, duodenal calcium determination does not appear to be a useful diagnostic test in chronic pancreatitis.
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PMID:Duodenal calcium in chronic pancreatitis: is it of diagnostic value? 370 99

The evidence is quite solid that a feedback inhibition system of the pancreatic exocrine secretion exists in a number of animal species. Whether or not such a regulatory system is operative in man remains controversial. Studies in normal human subjects which have been interpreted as evidence that such a regulatory system is not present in man suffer from serious flaws in experimental design, such as the inability to completely divert pancreatic enzymes (chymotrypsin, elastase) as important principles in this control mechanism. Studies in both normal human subjects and patients with chronic pancreatitis will be reviewed.
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PMID:Negative feedback inhibition of pancreatic exocrine secretion in humans. 379 74

To estimate the diagnostic value of elastase output in the duodenal aspirates during a pancreozymin secretin test, elastase as well as amylase, chymotrypsin, trypsin, and lipase was determined in 46 controls and 61 patients with various disease. The elastase output decreased significantly in chronic pancreatitis (mild exocrine insufficiency 13 and advanced eight), pancreatic cancer (n = 10), and liver cirrhosis (n = 14) when compared with the controls. The outputs of the four other enzymes also decreased in chronic pancreatitis and pancreatic cancer, not in liver cirrhosis. Low elastase output was found in four of 13 chronic pancreatitis patients with mild exocrine insufficiency, whereas low outputs of the other enzymes were observed in only one or less of the 13. The ratio of elastase to amylase alone was significantly lower in the pancreatic diseases. The results suggest that elastase is the most susceptible enzyme to pancreatic dysfunction and that its output and its ratio to amylase output provide a valuable index to assess the enzyme secretory capacity in the pancreatic diseases.
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PMID:Elastase secretion in pancreatic disease. 384 84

We examined the maximal serum PABA concentration within 3 hrs (MS-PABA) and the 6 hr urinary PABA recovery (6 hr U-PABA) after BT-PABA administration, PABA excretion index, and chymotrypsin secretory response to caerulein-secretin stimulation in ten control subjects and fifteen patients with chronic pancreatitis diagnosed on the basis of pancreatograms. The results suggested that MS-PABA can distinguish the patients with definite irregular dilatation of the main pancreatic duct from the controls, but not those with localized irregular dilatations of the side branches from the controls. MS-PABA showed a significant correlation with 6 hr U-PABA, PABA excretion index, chymotrypsin output and bicarbonate output. This modified method was shown to be useful in the diagnosis of chronic pancreatitis with unequivocally abnormal pancreatograms and/or markedly decreased chymotrypsin secretion. This modification will serve to simplify the BT-PABA test by eliminating urinary collection and shortening the procedure time.
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PMID:The usefulness of serum PABA measurement after BT-PABA administration in the diagnosis of chronic pancreatitis. 387 11

The indirect estimation of chymotrypsin by the tubeless ALTAB-test was performed in 17 patients with well-defined exocrine pancreatic insufficiency, 10 of them after operation for chronic pancreatitis. In comparison with 12 healthy subjects the test proved to be a non-expensive, certain and specific method for detection of moderate and severe exocrine insufficiency. It exists positive correlations with the secretin-pancreocymine-test and with the maximal stimulable secretion of insulin. Therefore the ALTAB-test after operations with modified anatomy of the gastro-intestinal tract especially is able to substitute extensive testing of secretion in screening and controlling of progression. The value of the 3-hour serum level of PABA corresponds to the urine output within 6 hours. There are such advantages like independence from the kidney-function, avoidance of incomplete urine-collection and a considerable reduced test-time too.
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PMID:[Modified ALTAB test in the diagnosis of exocrine pancreatic insufficiency]. 387 16

The degree of correlation between exocrine pancreatic function and endocrine secretory capacity was examined in 13 chronic pancreatitis patients with secondary diabetes mellitus, 8 chronic pancreatitis patients without diabetes, and 11 healthy subjects. The two parameters were studied under maximal stimulation (volume-corrected secretin-pancreozym test and glucose-tolbutamide-glucagon provocation, respectively). A close, linear correlation was found between all endocrine variables and pancreatic acinar function (e.g. rs = 0.77 for chymotrypsin output and C-peptide release; p less than 0.0001). The correlation was less strong with pancreatic bicarbonate output (e.g. rs = 0.49 for C-peptide release; p less than 0.05). In our patients, secondary overt diabetes occurred in chronic pancreatitis when protease outputs were, on an average, reduced to about 10% of the mean maximal protease output of normal subjects.
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PMID:Beta-cell reserve capacity in chronic pancreatitis. 388 12

Total plasma amino acids were determined by the ninhydrin method in 37 controls and 30 patients with chronic pancreatitis and normal (n = 7) pancreatic enzyme output or mildly (n = 6), moderately (n = 8), and severely (n = 9) reduced pancreatic enzyme output. Intravenous injection of synthetic secretin did not change plasma amino acid levels. During a combined intravenous infusion of secretin (1 CU/kg X h) and pancreozymin (1 Ivy dog unit/kg X h), amino acid concentrations decreased maximally by 31% +/- 19% (mean +/- SD) in controls, but only by 6.3% +/- 4.7% in patients with exocrine pancreatic insufficiency (p less than 0.001 vs. controls). At a cutoff limit of less than or equal to 12% for the decrease in total amino acids, mild exocrine insufficiency (20%-40% of mean normal chymotrypsin output) was identified with a sensitivity of 67%, whereas moderately to severely impaired function was detected in every case (overall sensitivity 91%). Pancreatic function, as assessed by duodenal intubation and the tubeless amino acid test, was significantly correlated (e.g., rs = 0.73 for chymotrypsin output, p much less than 0.001). In 15 controls and 13 patients with mildly (n = 5) to severely impaired pancreatic function, individual amino acids were estimated. Plasma serine kinetics completely distinguished both groups. Kinetics of serine, valine, isoleucine, and histidine correlated even better with pancreatic function than those of total amino acids.
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PMID:Decrease in plasma amino acid level after secretin and pancreozymin as an indicator of exocrine pancreatic function. 394 4

Discriminant analysis was used to interpret the results of the secretin-cholecystokinin (CCK) test in the diagnosis of chronic pancreatitis. An allocation rule based on the use of two test variables--mean chymotrypsin concentration and peak bicarbonate output--was constructed to distinguish between 63 patients with chronic pancreatitis and 68 patients without organic disease. These latter patients had signs and symptoms similar to those of the patients with chronic pancreatitis and were used as controls. The allocation rule was applied to a larger set of individuals, including 105 patients with various other diseases. The sensitivity of the test was 83%, and the specificity was 89%. With a prevalence of chronic pancreatitis of 27% in this set of individuals, the positive predictive value was 73%, the negative predictive value was 93%, and the accuracy rate 87%. This diagnostic performance of the secretin-CCK test gives the test a meaningful place in the examination of patients suspected of having chronic pancreatitis.
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PMID:Evaluation of the secretin-cholecystokinin test for chronic pancreatitis by discriminant analysis. 395 50

Lactoferrin (LF), chymotrypsin and lipase activity were measured in duodenal juice during pancreatic stimulation. Secretin (0.5 CU/kg/h) plus cerulein (75 ng/kg/h) were infused intravenously in 98 subjects: 33 patients without organic diseases (C), 40 patients affected by chronic pancreatitis (CP), and 25 patients with different gastrointestinal diseases (GID). LF was determined by means of a new noncompetitive immunoenzymatic assay with a sensitivity in the duodenal juice of 5 ng/ml. Duodenal LF concentrations were significantly higher in CP than in C or GID (p less than 0.001). LF was in a normal range in acute relapsing pancreatitis due to biliary stones or pancreas divisum. In the diagnosis of the chronic pancreatitis, LF/lipase ratios showed a specificity of 93% and a sensitivity of 95%. Our results show that LF immunoassay in duodenal juice is a sensitive and accurate assay to apply in pancreatic function tests involving duodenal content analysis.
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PMID:Duodenal lactoferrin in patients with chronic pancreatitis and gastrointestinal diseases. 406 44

The interrelationships of proteolytic enzymes and amylase have been studied in the duodenal aspirate obtained from subjects with normal and abnormal pancreatic function during stimulation with secretin and pancreozymin. While the relationship of trypsin to chymotrypsin was independent of stimulus and presence of pancreatic disease the ratio of proteolytic enzymes to amylase rose when the degree of stimulation of the pancreas was increased. Patients with recent acute pancreatitis and with chronic pancreatitis tended to have more severe impairment of secretion of proteolytic enzymes than of amylase. In routine tests of pancreatic function both proteolytic and non-proteolytic enzymes should be measured, both because an abnormal ratio may be of diagnostic significance and because the two different groups of enzymes provide mutual checks of the secretory capacity of pancreatic enzymes.
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PMID:The interrelationships of pancreatic enzymes in human duodenal aspirate. 548 36


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