Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:4.1.2.13 (aldolase)
3,461 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We have demonstrated that maneuvers capable of reducing Ca influx into cells have beneficial effects in dystrophic hamsters and Duchenne muscular dystrophy. Since dantrolene inhibits Ca release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum, its effects on DMD was studied in 7 patients of 6 to 13 years of age (mean 10.8 years). Patients were studied for 4 years with tri-monthly evaluations of manual muscle testing (MMT), functional activity, and serum CK and aldolase. During the first 2-year period, no medicines were given and served as control. In the second 2-year period, dantrolene 8 mg/kg/d was administered. No side effects were observed. In 1 patient, mild weakness occurred that disappeared when the dose was reduced to 6 mg/kg/d. The 95% confidence limit for the difference in slopes of regression lines from tri-monthly MMT was asymmetric in favor of dantrolene in 5 of 7 patients. Serum CK did not differ between the first and second year of the control and treatment periods, respectively. However, it fell significantly from the second year of control to the first year of treatment (P = 0.003). The fall during the first year of treatment was significantly greater (P less than 0.01) than in age-matched natural history controls during the same length of observation. There was a 3-fold reduction in CK when the pooled values of the first and second year control vs. treatment periods were analyzed. No changes were observed in functional activity and serum aldolase. The data suggest that dantrolene reduces serum CK in DMD associated with a lessening trend in MMT deterioration.
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PMID:Effect of dantrolene in Duchenne muscular dystrophy. 185 56

A case of severe infantile form of congenital nemaline myopathy who developed extensive fatty replacement of the skeletal muscles was described. A girl was born with severe hypotonia and flaccidity of the extremities. She was put on a ventilator because of the severe respiratory insufficiency. Muscle biopsy performed at 3 months of age revealed numerous nemaline rods in myofibers. She had an anoxic episode at 2 years of age and fell into a vegetative state after that. Serum creatine kinase and aldolase levels were normal. At 8 years of age, X-ray CT scan of the skeletal muscles revealed diffuse and severe fatty replacement of the skeletal muscles of the trunk and extremities; this was far more extensive than in the case of Duchenne muscular dystrophy of similar age. Second muscle biopsy performed in the anterior tibialis muscle at the age of 8 years revealed atrophic muscle fibers and extensive proliferation of connective and fatty tissues. Electron microscopy revealed, numerous rod-containing muscles fibers with severe disorganization and loss of myofilaments. Sural nerve biopsy performed at the same time showed decreased number of large myelinated fibers. Although a possibility could not be excluded completely that the episode of anoxia and chronic debilitation may have contributed to these pathological neuromuscular findings, it was presumed that severe degeneration and fatty replacement of the skeletal muscles progress rapidly after birth in some cases of severe infantile form of congenital nemaline myopathy.
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PMID:[A case of severe infantile form of congenital nemaline myopathy with extensive fatty replacement of the skeletal muscles]. 217 91

A 25-year-old female patient with an approximate 10-year-history of slowly progressive muscle weakness was diagnosed as a manifesting carrier of Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) because her muscle biopsy showed scattered fibers with no dystrophin on immunohistochemical staining. She had no family history of neuromuscular disorders. She was in good health until about 14 years of age, when she developed muscle weakness and atrophy of the extremities with slow aggravation. On admission at the age of 25 years, she had asymmetrical muscle atrophy in the lower extremities; the left femur, right femur, left crus, and right crus measured 36.0, 40.5, 31.5, and 35.5 cm in circumference, respectively. However, the muscle weakness of the extremities was symmetrical with no laterality, and the proximal muscles in the lower extremities were predominantly affected to 3+/5 MMT test. She walked with a mild wadding manner and stood up with Gower' maneuver. Deep tendon reflexes of the extremities were almost normoactive with no pathologic reflexes. As to laboratory findings, serum enzymes of muscular origin were elevated; GOT was 44 IU/l, GPT 60 IU/l, LDH 829 IU/l, CK 4238 IU/l, and aldolase 31 SL units. The electromyogram showed myopathic changes mixed with some neurogenic components. Peripheral nerve conduction velocity was normal. A computed tomography of the skeletal muscles showed more marked atrophy and lower density in the left lower extremity than in the right. The biopsied left gastrocnemius muscle demonstrated a marked variation in fiber size with some necrotic and regenerating fibers. On immunohistochemical stain with anti-dystrophin antibody, the dystrophin negative fibers were scattered among positive fibers in a mosaic distribution.
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PMID:[A manifesting carrier of Duchenne muscular dystrophy presenting mosaic distribution of dystrophin negative and positive muscle fibers]. 218 62

Emery-Dreifuss muscular dystrophy (EDMD) is a rare X-linked muscular dystrophy. Creatine kinase (CK) activity usually is increased in serum of affected males, but results for aldolase and lactate dehydrogenase (LD) in serum have been inconsistent, as have those for CK in carrier females. There have been few studies of CK-MB or LD isoenzyme-1 (LD-1) in EDMD. We measured CK, CK-MB, LD, LD-1, and aldolase activity in sera of 84 members of two large families with EDMD. DNA analysis had been carried out on all subjects. Although CK, LD, and aldolase activities were significantly increased in affected males, CK activity was the most consistently increased and was the least subject to artifactual increases. Mean CK-MB in serum was mildly increased, but LD-1 was within the normal reference interval, suggesting that CK-MB is increased in skeletal muscle in EDMD, as has been found in other forms of dystrophy. CK decreased with age in affected males. We saw no significant increases of muscle enzymes or isoenzymes in 33 EDMD carriers studied, of whom 19 were obligate carriers and 14 had been identified by DNA analysis.
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PMID:Muscle enzymes and isoenzymes in Emery-Dreifuss muscular dystrophy. 231 Dec 8

Sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase, acylphosphatase and other soluble enzymes (creatine kinase, lactate dehydrogenase, aldolase and pyruvate kinase) were assayed in muscle biopsies from patients affected by Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) and from normal controls. Specific activities of all the soluble enzymes were decreased in dystrophic muscle, acylphosphatase exhibiting the most marked and significant decrease comparable to that of creatine kinase, in spite of a moderate increase in serum levels. Also, Ca2+-ATPase, particularly the calcium-dependent activity, was decreased in dystrophic muscle. A positive correlation, higher than with the other soluble enzymes, was obtained between acylphosphatase specific activity and the percentage of Ca2+-activation of Ca2+-ATPase. These findings: suggest an impairment of microsomal calcium uptake which could be, at least in part, responsible for sarcoplasmic calcium accumulation observed in DMD; do not disagree with an hypothesized role of acylphosphatase in intracellular calcium homeostasis, consistent with the enzyme's demonstrated hydrolytic activity on the phosphorylated intermediate of Ca2+-ATPase.
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PMID:Sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase and acylphosphatase activities in muscle biopsies from patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophy. 302 59

In myopathic disorders, abnormal serum enzyme activities are seen primarily in diseases of skeletal muscle where the condition involves the muscle fibers themselves. In denervation myopathies, serum enzyme activities are usually normal. The most dramatic increases of serum enzymes, particularly creatine kinase, are found in the dystrophic diseases, particularly Duchenne dystrophy. A review is given here of the many causes of abnormal serum enzyme activities where the source of enzymes is believed to be skeletal muscle. These include the dystrophies, various types of trauma, exercise, drug- and poison-induced causes including alcohol, malignant hyperthermia, inflammatory diseases, and miscellaneous causes. Tissue and serum activities are summarized for the commonly performed serum enzymes, i.e., CK, LD, AST, and aldolase. An extensive tabular and current description of the various types of dystrophies is given along with serum CK and pyruvate kinase activities.
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PMID:The enzymology of skeletal muscle disorders. 637 45

We have assessed the sensitivity and specificity of tests to detect carriers of Duchenne muscular dystrophy by use of three serum enzymes (creatine kinase, pyruvate kinase, and aldolase) and discriminant analysis in 21 obligate heterozygotes and 28 normal controls. We found no significant age effects on enzyme levels. Each enzyme level considered separately was significantly higher in heterozygotes. Use of logs improved discrimination, and log CK was sufficient by itself as a discriminant (that is, addition of other enzymes did not significantly improve discrimination). We present procedures to generate posteriori probabilities for genetic counselling that incorporate prior probabilities and enzyme levels. Our results show both improved sensitivity (90%) and specificity (86%).
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PMID:Improved detection of Duchenne muscular dystrophy heterozygotes using discriminant analysis of creatine kinase levels. 682

Total activity of creatine kinase (CK), lactate dehydrogenase (LD), aldolase (Ald), glutamico-oxaloacetic transaminase (GOT), and LD-isoenzyme distribution was studied in serum and muscle biopsies from normal persons and 117 patients with different types of muscular dystrophy: 82 Duchenne type (DMD), 12 BEcker type, 7 facioscapulohumeral (FSHMD), and 16 limb girdle (LGMD). Total enzyme activity in sera and muscle homogenates was determined by spectrophotometric assays. LD isoenzymes were separated by electrophoresis on agarose gel plates in barbital buffer (pH 8.6), scanned and quantitated. The amounts of the 2 types (M and H) of LD isoenzymes were calculated and the ratio of M/H in serum and muscle was used as an index to differentiate among the types of muscular dystrophy. Serum enzyme activity was elevated to variable degrees reflecting a corresponding decrease in muscle enzymes in the different muscular dystrophies. Patterns of LD isoenzymes in serum and muscle were specific to each type of muscle disease. Increase in serum LD5 (the muscle LD fraction) was a common feature in muscle damage. Changes in the amounts of M and H types in the subunits of LD correlated to the existence and severity of muscle damage. The mean muscle M/H ratio was 6.4 in controls, 1.8 in early DMD, 0.1 in late DMD, 3.0 in Becker type, 3.8 in FSHMD and 3.9 in LGMD. The muscle LD isoenzyme distribution in DMD showed a shift toward a more aerobic fetal muscle pattern. This is a result of the gradual disappearance of the mature anaerobic LD-type (M) and the increase in synthesis of the aerobic fetal LD-type (H) during the progression of the disease. This report provides a comparative study of the LD isoenzyme patterns in muscular dystrophies which may help in differential diagnosis.
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PMID:Muscle and serum enzymes and isoenzymes in muscular dystrophies. 723 20

We attempt to correlate the patient's disability and serum enzymes (creatinekinase, lactic dehydrogenase, aldolase, glutamic oxalacetic and glutamic piruvic transaminase) in several neuromuscular disorders using the Vignos and Archibald scale (V&A). In 806 cases we studied, serum enzyme levels and the V&A disability using a computer for Pearson's correlation and regressive analysis. A good correlation of the V&A with age suggested a progressive evolution (increased disability) in Duchenne muscular dystrophy, fascioscapulohumeral dystrophy, myotonic dystrophy, myopathies due to respiratory chain enzyme deficiency and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. A negative correlation (decrease disability with age) was found for multicore myopathy, benign myopathy of childhood with type 1 predominance, carnitine myopathy deficiency and dermatomyositis. It was found a correlation (p < 0.05) of the V&A and the level of specific serum enzymes with Duchenne muscular dystrophy, oculocraniosomatic dystrophies, polymyositis and polyarteritis nodosa. Using regression analysis, we found a weak interrelation between serum enzymes studied simultaneously and the V&A. These weak relations suggest some limitation in the long term use of the five serum enzymes in the evaluation of neuromuscular disorders when compared with V&A; although they are very important in the diagnosis.
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PMID:[Correlation between functional disability, age, and serum enzymes in neuromuscular diseases]. 757 10

Membrane-mediated excessive intracellular calcium accumulation (EICA) is a fundamental pathogenetic event associated with chronic muscle degeneration in patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), and in animals with hereditary muscular dystrophy (HMD). Because of potential Ca(2+)-channel blocking properties, we investigated the relative efficacies of chronic diltiazem (DTZM) (50 mg/kg/d), nifedipine (NFDN) (6 mg/kg/d), and verapamil (VPML) (25 mg/kg/d) therapies in reducing EICA and improving dystrophic pathobiology beginning in 30-day-old male BIO-14.6 strain dystrophic hamsters (DH). Each agent, and sterile distilled water as vehicle control, was given in a single daily oral dose for 180 days to four groups each of DH and BIO-F1B strain normal hamsters (NH). Plasma [Ca] and [Mg]; plasma aldolase (ALD), creatine kinase (CK), and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) activities; relative cardiac hypertrophy and relative soleus hypertrophy; tissue [Ca] and [Mg] of the heart and rectus femoris muscle, histology of rectus femoris, and overall mortality rate were quantitated. Muscle Mg was not modified in DH, or by any of these agents. NFDN produced significant edema in the soleus and myocardium. During the 6-month therapeutic trial, 45% DH and 18% NH died on VPML, 27% DH and 9% NH on NFDN, and 20% DH controls on distilled water, but none on DTZM; suggesting that DTZM treated DH lived longer than DH controls. Relative efficacy in regulating EICA in both the cardiac and skeletal muscles; plasma ALD, CK, and LDH; and improving associated dystrophic pathobiology was found to be DTZM >>> NFDN > VPML. DTZM appears to be the most effective and safest agent in mitigating EICA in cardiac and skeletal muscles, efflux of intracellular enzymes, histopathology of dystrophic muscle with sporadic necrosis, and chronic muscle degeneration in DH with HMD. DTZM therapy also halted the high morbidity and mortality associated with the dystrophic pathobiology inherent in DH.
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PMID:Regulation of membrane-mediated chronic muscle degeneration in dystrophic hamsters by calcium-channel blockers: diltiazem, nifedipine and verapamil. 846 95


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