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Query: EC:6.3.4.6 (
urease
)
7,490
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Helicobacter mustelae is a
urease
-rich bacterium associated with gastritis in ferrets. The ureases of H. mustelae and Helicobacter pylori, a bacterium implicated in human gastritis, share many characteristics. Helicobacter sp. ureases appear to be unique among bacterial enzymes in exhibiting submillimolar Km values and in being composed of two subunits.
Infect Immun 1991
Sep
PMID:Purification and characterization of Helicobacter mustelae urease. 187 50
Most patients with chronic duodenal ulcer (DU) craters have gastritis associated with Helicobacter pylori (HP), now thought to be the major cause of DU. A smaller proportion of DU patients have no detectable HP. In this study, we examined the frequency and causes of HP-negative duodenal ulcers. In 302 consecutive patients with endoscopic diagnosis of duodenal ulcer, 284 (94%) were found to have associated HP gastritis, whereas 18 (6%) were HP-negative on histology, culture, and
urease
test. The largest subgroup of HP-negative patients (8/18) was made up of those who had been taking nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), followed closely (4/18) by patients with recent intake of antibiotics. Causes of DU in the remaining subgroups included two patients with duodenal Crohn's disease, two with Gastrospirillum hominis infection, one with penetrating carcinoma of the pancreas and one with no detectable cause. We conclude that, although the most common causal factor of duodenal ulcer is HP, some 6% of DU's will be HP-negative, signaling unusual etiology. It is now important to identify the cause of duodenal ulcer so as to initiate appropriate therapy.
Am J Gastroenterol 1991
Sep
PMID:Helicobacter pylori-negative duodenal ulcer. 188 93
Urease purified from Helicobacter pylori by differential ultracentrifugation and fast pressure liquid chromatography was composed of subunits with apparent molecular weights (MrS) of 66,000 and 30,000. Electron microscopy of this purified material demonstrated that it formed disc-shaped macromolecular aggregates that were approximately 13 nm in diameter and 3 nm thick. Images of both negatively stained and shadowed preparations indicated that the discs tended to stack to form pairs and then these pairs further aggregated to form four-disc stacks. This stacking of subunits explains the heterogeneity observed previously in the molecular weight of
urease
preparations. In some negatively stained preparations there were also some smaller (approximately 8-nm-diameter) annular units present, which may represent individual
urease
units or possibly an aggregate of one of the two subunits from which
urease
is constructed.
J Bacteriol 1991
Sep
PMID:Macromolecular structure and aggregation states of Helicobacter pylori urease. 188 43
Helicobacter pylori possesses unusually high
urease
activity that lowers the urea concentration and raises the ammonium concentration of the gastric juice in infected people. The value of measuring urea and ammonium concentrations in gastric juice obtained during upper gastrointestinal endoscopy as a means of diagnosing the presence and eradication of the infection was assessed. Twenty four subjects with the infection and 14 in whom it had been eradicated were examined. Their H pylori status was confirmed by antral biopsy and 14C urea breath test. The median (range) gastric juice urea concentration in infected subjects was 0.8 mmol/l (0.5-2.9 mmol/l), which was lower than that in the uninfected subjects (2.1 mmol/l (1.0-3.7 mmol/l)) (p less than 0.001). The median gastric juice ammonium concentration in infected subjects was 3.4 mmol/l (1.0-13.0 mmol/l), which was higher than that in the uninfected subjects (0.64 mmol/l (0.02-1.4 mmol/l)) (p less than 0.001). Though the two groups overlapped in respect of their urea and ammonium concentrations, they were completely different when the urea: ammonium ratios were calculated--the ratios ranged from 0.04-0.7 (median 0.26) and from 1.1-113 (median 3.4) in infected and uninfected subjects respectively (p less than 0.001). Treatment with H2 antagonists did not change the concentrations of urea and ammonium or their ratio in gastric juice. Measurement of the urea: ammonium ratio in aspirated gastric juice obtained during routine upper gastrointestinal endoscopy may provide a rapid method of detecting H pylori infection and of confirming its eradication.
Gut 1991
Sep
PMID:Detection of Helicobacter pylori infection of the gastric mucosa by measurement of gastric aspirate ammonium and urea concentrations. 191
Catheter-associated urinary tract infections (UTIc) remain the most common nosocomial infection. Although usually benign, UTIc cause bacteremia in 2-4% of patients and have been associated with a case fatality rate three times as high as nonbacteriuric patients. Risk factors for UTIc identified in multivariate analyses include increasing duration of use, female sex, absence of systemic antibiotics, and disconnection of the catheter-collecting tube junction. Recent studies suggest that most episodes of low colony count bacteriuria (10(2)-10(4) cfu/ml) rapidly progress to high (greater than or equal to 10(5)/ml) colony counts within 24-48 hours. In persons with long-term catheterization, bacteriuria inevitably develops and the infecting strains change frequently. In this setting, Proteus and Morganella species produce catheter encrustations and persistent bacteriuria. Routes of bacterial entry have been well defined and differ by gender, with the periurethral route predominating in women and the intraluminal route in men. Growth of bacteria in biofilms on the inner surface of catheters promotes encrustation and may protect bacteria from antimicrobial agents. Bacterial virulence factors have not been well characterized in UTIc, but fimbrial adhesins have been associated with bacterial persistence in the catheterized urinary tract, and
urease
production has been associated with stone formation and catheter encrustation. Recent efforts to prevent UTIc have focused mainly on preventing bacterial entry to the urinary tract or eradicating bacteriuria after its onset and have been largely unsuccessful. Systemic antimicrobials, sealed tubing and catheter junctions, silver ion-coated catheters, and antiseptics in the collecting bag have all been efficacious in one or more controlled trials. Failure to stratify patients by major risk factors, especially gender, antimicrobial exposure, and catheter duration, makes interpretation of many trials difficult. Further research in the areas of innovative catheter system design, bacterial-host epithelial cell interaction, and targeted antimicrobial prophylaxis seem the most likely approaches to controlling UTIc in the future.
Am J Med 1991
Sep
16
PMID:Catheter-associated urinary tract infections: epidemiology, pathogenesis, and prevention. 192 94
A prospective study including 119 patients submitted for routine endoscopy of the upper gastrointestinal tract was initiated to compare three commercial biopsy
urease
tests with regard to sensitivity and specificity in detecting Helicobacter pylori colonization of the gastric mucosa and their reaction velocity. Specific culture, microscopy after staining with methylene-blue, histologic search after modified Giemsa staining and the combined results of culture and histology ("true standard") served as reference methods. The sensitivity and specificity of all three tests were high: Angass
urease
test 92.0%/97.7%, Telen-Quick test 94.7%/100%, CLO-test 94.7%/100% (analysis of one antrum and one body biopsy in a single test kit). Telen-Quick and CLO-tests reacted faster than the Angass
urease
test, but a period of 24 hours was necessary for all three tests to detect "true negatives". Histology and microscopy were reliable reference methods concerning sensitivity and specificity, while culture was characterized by inferior sensitivity (78.6%) and high specificity (100%).
Med Klin (Munich) 1991
Sep
15
PMID:[Diagnosis of Helicobacter pylori colonization of the gastric mucosa. A prospective comparative study of direct test methods and validation of a new urease test]. 194 84
Three rapid
urease
tests, i.e., liquid urea broth containing phenol red as indicator, liquid urea broth containing bromothymol blue as indicator and CLO gel were compared in 109 patients of dyspepsia for the diagnosis of Campylobacter pylori (Helicobacter pylori) infection. Mean time taken for positive reaction in liquid broth with phenol was 3 minutes (range 0.6 to 5.3 minutes) with bromothymol blue was 3.5 minutes (range 0.4 to 5.5 minutes) while with CLO gel it was 101 minutes (range 11-261 minutes). There was no difference in results of liquid urea broth containing phenol red and bromothymol blue. The difference in timing of urea broth containing phenol red and bromothymol blue was statistically significant as compared to CLO gel (p less than 0.05). Rapid
urease
tests employing liquid urea broth are quick, simple and reliable for the diagnosis of Helicobacer pylori infection.
J Assoc Physicians India 1990
Sep
PMID:Relative merits of various rapid biopsy urease tests for diagnosis of Helicobacter pylori (Campylobacter pylori). 209 20
Helicobacter (Campylobacter) pylori has been cultured from the antral biopsies of 85-90% of patients of gastritis, gastric ulcer and duodenal ulcer at different centres. Studies conducted all over the world have firmly implicated this organism in the aetiology of active superficial gastritis and recurrences of duodenal ulcer. Two hundred patients with upper abdominal pain, distension, vomiting and/or haemetemesis were subjected to OGD scopy. In 163 of these patients there was endoscopic evidence of gastritis; in 24 there was DU; in 3, GU and in 10 it was normal. Diagnosis of H pylori infection was made by the rapid biopsy
urease
test which is nearly 100% specific and 98% sensitive. 170 out of 200 patients were positive for H pylori. Among these were 138 patients of gastritis (84.6%); 22 cases of DU (91.6%); 2 cases of GU (66.6%) and 8 in whom endoscopy was normal. Histological examination of the antral biopsy specimens showed mild to severe infiltration of mucosa with lymphocytes and plasma cells. None of the 170 H pylori positive cases showed polymorphonuclear infiltration which has been stressed repeatedly by most Western authors to be characteristic of "active" superficial gastritis associated with H pylori infection. Even in those with a history of dyspepsia of barely 4 weeks duration or less there was no PMN infiltration in the mucosa. Thus the local response to infection by H pylori of the gastric mucosa is different in Indian patients.
J Assoc Physicians India 1990
Sep
PMID:Unusual features of Helicobacter (Campylobacter) pylori--associated gastritis in India. A study of 200 cases. 209 22
A new method of detecting
urease
activity in Enterobacteriaceae was developed. An 8.5 cm filter paper disc impregnated with 20% urea and 0.5% bromocresol purple was placed on the surface of a glucose fermentation plate after inoculation with a multipoint replicator and overnight incubation. This method was compared with the commercially prepared Mast urea agar (Multipoint) and Fuscoe's Urea Plate Medium. A total of 240 routine isolates of Enterobacteriaceae were tested for
urease
activity using the three methods. Sixty five isolates were positive by the three methods while 33 isolates gave differing results. The urea disc method was more sensitive for detecting
urease
activity in isolates of Klebsiella species, Morganella morganii, and Yersinia enterocolitica. It also overcame the problem associated with the other two media of diffusion of alkali end products through the medium.
J Clin Pathol 1990
Sep
PMID:Use of urea filter paper disc to detect urease activity in Enterobacteriaceae by multipoint replication techniques. 221 71
Reports indicate that L-carnitine administration before 100% lethal dose of ammonium acetate suppresses the symptoms of ammonia toxicity and prevents death in mice. However, we have been unable to confirm this observation. The cause of discrepancy between our results and the results of others was investigated with two models of hyperammonemia in mice: 1) that induced by intraperitoneal injection of
urease
and 2) that induced by intraperitoneal injection of ammonium acetate. L-Carnitine administration failed to protect mice against ammonia toxicity induced by intraperitoneal injection of
urease
. Mortality in mice treated with L-carnitine 30 min before injection of ammonium acetate was similar to that of controls pretreated with saline. Ammonia and urea levels in plasma, liver, and brain were also similar in both groups. However, the values were significantly lower than those in mice denied either pretreatment before the ammonium acetate challenge. These results indicate that pretreatment acts to reduce blood and tissue ammonia simply by diminishing the rate of absorption of the challenge, owing to the dilution of ammonium acetate upon mixing with the contents of the peritoneal cavity. Thus, any protocol that does not compare results of a putative protective agent with those obtained with an equal volume of solvents or saline runs the risk of ascribing protective property to the agent when the protection may, in fact, have been afforded by the solvent.
Pediatr Res 1990
Sep
PMID:Failure of L-carnitine to protect mice against hyperammonemia induced by ammonium acetate or urease injection. 223 23
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