Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.4.22.6 (
chymopapain
)
407
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Experience with
chymopapain
chemonucleolysis in 1,200 cases of lumbar disk disease indicates that it is an effective method of relieving
pain
resulting from an abnormal intervertebral disk. Complications were few; anaphylaxis occurring immediately after injection was by far the most serious. With the use of a corticosteroid and an antihistamine in preoperative preparation, the incidence of anaphylaxis had dropped, although it still occurs. On long-term follow-up, chemonucleolysis appears to be as good as laminectomy in properly selected cases.
...
PMID:Chymopapain chemonucleolysis in lumbar disk disease. 12 15
Pre-injection psychological test scores, surgeon ratings, and patient biographical data were evaluated as predictors of success of
chymopapain
injection therapy in 130 patients who would otherwise have been treated by laminectomy. Three psychological tests were administered to each patient: the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory, the Cornell Medical Index, and the Quick Test (a measure of mental ability). In addition, the surgeons rated their patients on a five-point scale immediately after injection relative to their suitability for injection therapy and at one year relative to the objective and symptomatic results. The MMPI hysteria and hypochondriasis scales and the surgeon's rating of the psychogenic component of the patient's
pain
were predictive of the result of chemonucleolysis. The patient's biographical data which consisted of age, sex, marital status, occupation, and education were not related to postoperative outcome.
...
PMID:Preoperative psychological tests as predictors of success of chemonucleolysis in the treatment of the low-back syndrome. 12 36
In three cases in which chemonucleolysis with
chymopapain
was used for the treatment of back and sciatic
pain
, gas from the vacuum phenomenon of a degenerated lumbar intervertebral disc was recovered. In one of these, the gas analyzed by gas chromatography contained 90%--92% nitrogen.
...
PMID:Analysis of gas in vacuum lumbar disc. 41 44
The authors report 66 patients with signs, symptoms, and a myelographic abnormality of herniated lumbar disc, who were not responsive to conservative treatment. The discs were injected at random with either
chymopapain
or a placebo. Neither patient nor surgeon knew which agent was used until after the results had been tabulated. Unless early laminectomy was necessary for intractable
pain
, all patients were followed for 2 months or more. There was no statistically significant difference in incidence or quality of improvement between the two groups:
chymopapain
was successful in 58% while placebo was successful in 49% (p = 0.15). Early results from this study indicate that most, if not all, of the putative effectiveness of chemonucleolysis probably derives from a placebo effect.
...
PMID:Double-blind evaluation of intradiscal chymopapain for herniated lumbar discs. Early results. 78 27
Chymopapain degrades the nucleus pulposus portion of the intervertebral disk of rabbits. The degradation is not grossly visible until 15 days post-injection. Depolymerization of the chondromucoprotein and decreases in the ability of a disk to imbibe fluid, is, in effect, a "chemical decompression" of the nucleur pulposus. The enzyme must come into direct contact with the chondromucoprotein complex of the disk material, and to a significant extent also must reach the area of disk material adjacent to the herniated annulus. Rapid depolymerization of the chondromucoprotein complex on a biomechanical level, and "decompression" of disk material on a biomechanical level can be correlated with relief of
pain
in all types of disk herniation in human beings. A primary biochemical change in the disk material would lead to a secondary decrease in inflammation if the change led to a "decompression" of the chondromucoprotein. Since the primary effect of
chymopapain
is on the chondromucoprotein of the disk, beneficial results would not be expected if nerve root compression is due to bony impingement or scar tissue following previous surgery. Chymopapain did not seem to possess any anti-inflammatory properties when bone was used as an irritant under a nerve root. However, this was technically difficult to evaluate and the possibility that
chymopapain
may also interfere with a chemical mediator of
pain
or interfere directly with an inflammatory reaction secondary to root compression can not be excluded.
...
PMID:Experimental studies on the effect of chymopapain on nerve root compression caused by intervertebral disk material. 112 86
Back spasm, or spasm of the back muscles, is the commonest adverse reaction encountered after chemonucleolysis. In order to overcome this troublesome complication, the authors present a new 'paradiscal injection technique'. After the injection of
chymopapain
into the affected disc, the needle is withdrawn to just outside the annulus. Bupivacaine is injected into the paradiscal 'space' which acts upon the paravertebral muscles. Eighty consecutive patients have been treated by chemonucleolysis with paradiscal injection for
pain
relief. All patients were discharged the same day or the following day and no immediate complications occurred. When reviewed 3 weeks later, only three (3.8%) patients complained of back pain (which was different in character to that present before the injection or was exacerbated by the injection).
Pain
persisted in the same patients until 6 months after the injection but was negligible. None of the remaining patients had developed back pain as a result of
chymopapain
. The authors suggest that the addition of paradiscal injection of bupivicaine after cymopapain injection can reduce the incidence of spasm of the back muscles. This technique is a major contribution to increasing the efficacy of chemonucleolysis for the treatment of herniated lumbar disc.
...
PMID:A new paradiscal injection technique for the relief of back spasm after chemonucleolysis. 138 53
Stenosis of the nerve root canal caused by isolated resorption of a lumbar disc is a frequently observed pathology, but one about which the orthopaedist still knows relatively little. Henry Crock was the first to reveal its principal pathogenetic factor, disc resorption, and to accurately describe the syndrome and its surgical treatment. A total of 22 patients operated according to Henry Crock's indications and followed-up after 2 years were reviewed. In 20 cases decompression alone was performed, while in 2 cases anterior fusion and MOSS instrumentation were associated. Of the 22 patients submitted to decompression 17 revealed complete regression of
pain
. Three cases failed: 1 patient had previously been treated with
chymopapain
, while 3 are awaiting anterior fusion to treat persistent lumbar
pain
. Follow-up is not sufficient for the two patients submitted to anterior fusion.
...
PMID:Stenosis of the nerve root canal caused by disc resorption. 158 62
The authors report their experience with 60 patients treated for lumbar disc herniation by chemonucleolysis with
chymopapain
and followed-up 1 to 3 years after treatment. Long-term results were as follows: excellent: 50%; good: 40%; fair: 8.2%; poor: 1.8%. The high percentage of positive results is attributed to the rigid criteria for patient selection used, which resulted in treatment by chemonucleolysis in only 18.6% of the surgical cases of lumbar disc pathology observed. 27.2% of the patients treated complained of disorders which resulted in postoperative complications and/or prolonged convalescence: prolonged low back pain and vertebral stiffness in 20%, persistent contralateral sciatic
pain
in 5.4%; intense but transitory worsening of the sciatica in 1.8%. The most feared complication of chemonucleolysis is paraplegia occurring after the inadverted injection of the enzyme into the spinal fluid. This risk overshadows the positive attributes of the method. The most important advantage of chemonucleolysis, as compared with surgery, is that it avoids epidural scarring and permanent postoperative anatomical changes. Patients may benefit from these advantages, but they must be willing to accept the negative aspects of the method, as well.
...
PMID:Chemonucleolysis: advantages and disadvantages. 236 52
Painful
symptomatology in the lower limbs coming on with walking must not systematically be attributed to arteritis of the lower limbs. Among the characteristics which may suggest that this "claudication" is due to a narrowed lumbar canal, is the presence of paresthesia and above all the clear improvement when the patient is seated or adopts a lumbar kyphotic position. It is therefore extremely important to keep in mind the radicular topography of
pain
and neurological deficit. The congenitally narrow lumbar canals rarely produce problems unless there is further narrowing of the lumbar or radicular canal by a disco-osteophytic projection anteriorly, a posterior articular osteophytic projection posteriorly, thickening of the ligamentum flavum, an abnormal widening of the dural sheath, or excess peridural fat. Among the complementary investigations, CAT scan is useful to analyse the structures involved, but this examination is carried out in decubitus, i.e., without lordosis, while narrowing principally appears on lumbar extension, i.e., in the upright position. Saccoradiculography therefore remains the investigation of choice, performed in the seated and upright position. It can objectively assess the degree of narrowing and analyse the proportion due to the anterior discal or posterior articular component. This investigation should only be requested after failure of medical treatment based above all on analgesics, physiotherapy in lumbar kyphosis, and an abdomino-lumbar corset support. In the event of failure of medical treatment and if the patient is very handicapped, one most often resorts to decompressive surgery, however when narrowing is principally due to a discal projection, one may attempt discolysis with
chymopapain
.
...
PMID:[Radicular claudication with a narrowed lumbar canal]. 252 41
Eighty-five patients with proven lumbar disc displacement who had failed at least 3 months of conservative care were enrolled in this prospective study. The patients were self-selected into one of three treatment groups: collagenase,
chymopapain
, or surgery, based on information provided regarding the nature benefits and risks of each.
Pain
levels were self-recorded by patients in the post-treatment period, and follow-up physical examinations were performed and data were collected regarding hospital stay and return to activities for 3 months post-treatment. Patient's
pain
perception post-treatment was statistically lowest in the surgically treated group. The enzyme-injected patients reported higher levels of
pain
perception throughout the follow-up period, with collagenase-treated patients reporting more
pain
than
chymopapain
patients. Surgical patients had the most satisfactory outcome of treatment at 3 months. An explanation regarding the differences in
pain
response to the two enzymes is offered based on in vitro studies of the effects of the enzymes on the two major structural macromolecules of the connective tissue matrix.
...
PMID:Pain response post-chemonucleolysis or disc excision. 254 May 34
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