Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.4.21.4 (trypsin)
42,187 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Thirty-six infants suffering from gastrointestinal diseases during infancy were evaluated for exocrine pancreatic function by means of the pancreozymin-secretin test. Duodenal fluid volume, protein content, and content and peak-specific activity of amylase, lipase, and trypsin were determined following intravenous administration of either pancreozymin (CCK) or secretin. Seven infants receiving long-term parenteral nutrition and 17 infants receiving oral feedings and exhibiting first-degree malnutrition in association with chronic diarrhea underwent testing. Results were compared to those of a group of 12 age-matched infants with chronic diarrhea and weight loss. Four patients receiving total parenteral nutrition (TPN) suffered from severe short bowel syndrome and three had intractable diarrhea of infancy. The total duration of TPN ranged from 1.5-12 months, and the period of exclusive TPN in the absence of oral feedings ranged from 1-4 months. The heights, weights, and weight-for-height relationships were at or above the fifth percentile for all seven infants. The weight-for-height relationship of each patient in the control group was above the fifth percentile, while that of all malnourished infants was below the fifth percentile. No significant difference was found in the volume of fluid collected following either CCK or secretin administration. The content and concentration of amylase and lipase were lower in those patients receiving TPN. The levels were statistically significant (p less than 0.05) following secretin administration. In contrast, the peak-specific activity and total trypsin content, as well as protein content, was not significantly different in patients receiving TPN, controls, and malnourished patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Nutrition and exocrine pancreatic function in infancy: effects of total parenteral nutrition and first degree malnutrition. 244 51

Patients with the short bowel syndrome are usually afflicted by chronic diarrhoea and treated with opiate drugs, yet little documentation of the effects of such drugs on digestive function is available. In the present study we found that acute oral administration of loperamide resulted in 50% inhibition of postprandial trypsin and bilirubin output in patients with short bowel syndrome. These changes are consistent with an opiate effect.
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PMID:Inhibition of postprandial pancreatic and biliary secretion by loperamide in patients with short bowel syndrome. 706 42

Selective enterocyte transplantation is a potential alternative to small intestinal transplantation for treatment of the short bowel syndrome. Our aim was to compare chelation and enzymatic methods of isolating enterocytes with respect to initial cell yield and characteristics and in vitro growth. Enterocytes were harvested from adjacent ileal segments in 35 rabbits using chelation with EDTA and warm trypsinization. Determinations were made of initial viability by trypan blue exclusion, cell yield, and proportion of intact crypts. Cells (5 x 10(6)) were seeded in growth media into culture vessels. Cell attachment was estimated by measuring cells liberated by Dispase at 24 hr. In vitro growth was assessed at 14 and 28 days. Although total cell yield (15.0 +/- 9.9 vs 12.5 +/- 8.3 x 10(6) cells/cm) and intact crypts were similar, the trypsin technique resulted in cells with higher initial viability (86 +/- 7 vs 71 +/- 18%, P < 0.05). Cell attachment (7 +/- 8 vs 8 +/- 4%) and enterocyte disaccharidase activity were similar using both techniques. While the number of epithelial cell growth foci was not significantly different at 14 days, there was significantly greater surface coverage on both plain (44 +/- 20% vs 1 +/- 0%, P < 0.05) and Matrigel-coated (80 +/- 14 vs 16 +/- 25%, P < .05) vessels at 28 days with trypsin-isolated cells. Trypsinization resulted in a cell population which had a higher percentage of viable cells but a similar proportion of intact crypts and differentiated cells compared to those resulting from the chelation technique. Trypsin-liberated cells had greater capacity for in vitro growth particularly on Matrigel-coated surfaces.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Comparison of techniques for harvesting enterocytes for transplantation. 847 75

We report a 53-year-old female patient with short bowel syndrome who developed urticaria after administration of cyclic parenteral nutrition (PN). The urticaria occurred 2 hours into the 12-hour nocturnal infusion and resolved completely 1 hour after discontinuation of the PN infusion. The urticaria occurred despite removing lipids from the 3-in-1 PN solution. The urticaria did not occur when the multivitamin preparation was removed from the PN. Upon rechallenge with a PN solution containing a multivitamin, the urticaria reoccurred. Prick skin testing using the multivitamin in increasing aliquots was negative. Serum tryptase and 12-hour urinary histamine level during PN infusion containing the multivitamin was unchanged compared with baseline measurements. The patient had no allergic reaction using a similar dose of an oral multivitamin. This case illustrates that allergic reactions from PN infusion may occur and that the multivitamin preparation can be the cause.
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PMID:Urticaria associated with parenteral nutrition. 1622 40