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Query: UMLS:C0001339 (acute pancreatitis)
10,593 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The formation of complexes between human trypsinogens and the basic pancreatic trypsin inhibitor is demonstrated by using affinity chromatography on Sepharose coupled to basic pancreatic trypsin inhibitor. This interaction indicates the pre-existence of the active site in human trypsinogens. This active site induces the proteolytic activity of the two zymogens which activate spontaneously at pH 5.6 and pH 8.0 before and after affinity chromatography. The effect of affinity-chromatography on trypsinogen spontaneous activation is not the same on trypsinogens 1 and 2. A striking difference appears between the activation of the two trypsinogens. In all cases, trypsinogen 1 autoactivates more rapidly than trypsinogen 2, except at pH 5.6 in the presence of 10 mM Ca2+, which inhibits the autoactivation of trypsinogen 1. The effect of inherent proteolytic activity of human trypsinogens is discussed in relation to pathological conditions of enterokinase deficiency and acute pancreatitis.
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PMID:The two human trypsinogens. Evidence of complex formation with basic pancreatic trypsin inhibitor-proteolytic activity. 4 Jun 7

The inhibition of chymotrypsin activity by pig, dog, human and rat blood plasma was studied. N-Benzoyl-L-tyrosyl-p-amino-benzoate (PABA-peptide) was used as the substrate. Crystalline bovine chymotrypsin as well as activated lyophilized human, pig, rat and chicken pancreatic secretions were used as enzyme sources. Certain species differences were noted. Swine plasma had no effect on bovine or human chymotrypsin while it inhibited that of the chicken by 67%. Dog plasma was a potent inhibitor of chymotrypsin activity from all sources tested. An acute pancreatitis model using the rat was also developed in which pancreatic juice flow was blocked without interference with biliary flow. After 24 h, these animals had increased plasma amylase activity, decreased plasma protease inhibitor and decreased hematocrit. By 72 h, amylase, trypsin inhibitor and hematocrit had nearly recovered while chymotrypsin inhibitor had actually increased above control levels. In rats subjected to hepatectomy or to hepatectomy plus pancreatic blockage, plasma protease inhibitor was even more severely depressed and remained so.
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PMID:Species specificity and other aspects of chymotrypsin inhibition by plasma. 61 41

Within a few hours after one injection of fresh human serum by the intraperitoneal route only, mice developed pancreatic acinar cell necrosis and inflammation, fat necrosis, elevated serum amylase and a shocklike state. The extent of these lesions and mortalities were roughly dose dependent and were not noticeably modified by either different fasting cycles or pilocarpine. Acinar cell changes and necrosis usually developed first in subserosal acini. The earliest ultrastructural change detected was nonspecific swelling of cytoplasmic compartments which was reversible but also preceded the cytoplasmic degradation that developed in cells undergoing necrosis. Notably, zymogen granule dissolution neither preceded nor accompanied this swelling, but developed pari passu with cell degradation. Occasionally, intact granules were found in necrotic cells. Serum was cytotoxic for isolated acinar cells in vitro, even in the presence of soybean trypsin inhibitor. These results (1) indicate that the injury mechanism in vivo is directly initiated through contact of serum with acinar cell surfaces and is independent of zymogen secretions and trypsin activation, and (2) suggest that a rapid disturbance in cell membrane permeability results, the magnitude of which being the primary determinant of cell death. Pancreatic toxicity of human serum was abolished by aging, heating, ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid, heparin, zymosan, cobra venom factor, and absorptions with mouse red blood cells, against which fresh, unabsorbed serum was hemolytic. Pancreatic toxicity in vitro and, to a much lesser extent, in vivo was reconstituted by combining the red blood cell-absorbed serum with either heated serum, or with IgM-enriched, but not IgG serum fractions. Fresh cord serum was virtually nontoxic and could substitute for absorbed serum in such reconstitutions. These results indicate that the injury mechanism involves at least two serum components. By both circumstance and analogy, other results and a review of other examples of foreign sera toxicity suggest that they are components of a complement-dependent, cytotoxic heterophile antibody system. The relevance of this odd phenomenon is that it offers a simple model of acute pancreatitis, contributes to the debunking of traditional notions of the pivotal role of zymogens in the initiation of acute pancreatitis, and hints at a potential pathogenetic connection between pancreatitis and products of immune or related reactions.
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PMID:Foreign serum-induced pancreatitis in mice. I. A new model of acute pancreatitis. 120 81

The role of exogenous and endogenous cholecystokinin has been studied in the process of pancreatic regeneration after acute pancreatitis. A mild form of pancreatitis was induced in rats by subcutaneous cerulein at 12 micrograms.kg-1, three times a day for 2 days. After 3 days of rest, the cerulein-treated rats were divided into four groups: rats with acute pancreatitis fed 20% casein, who received no treatment; rats fed 50% casein; rats fed 20% casein supplemented with 1% soybean trypsin inhibitor (SBTI); and rats fed 20% casein who received 1 microgram.kg-1 of subcutaneous cerulein, three times a day. Controls were fed 20% casein plus saline subcutaneously. Rats were killed after 5, 10, or 20 days of treatment. Pancreatitis resulted in significant decreases in pancreatic weight and contents of protein, amylase, chymotrypsin, RNA and DNA. During the regenerative process, 1 microgram.kg-1 of cerulein increased all parameters to control values within 5 days and induced pancreatic growth thereafter. SBTI restored the pancreas to normal after 10 days with cellular hypertrophy; the 50% casein diet gave a response similar to SBTI without hypertrophy. It can be concluded that cerulein and SBTI can accelerate pancreatic regeneration after an attack of acute pancreatitis.
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PMID:Soybean trypsin inhibitor and cerulein accelerate recovery of cerulein-induced pancreatitis in rats. 137 Jun 63

The effect of FUT-175, a new synthetic trypsin inhibitor, was evaluated in a lethal model of acute hemorrhagic pancreatitis induced by feeding mice a choline-deficient, ethionine-supplemented diet (CDE diet). When FUT-175 was given prophylactically at doses of 20 mg/kg body wt, the survival rate was significantly improved (p less than 0.05). The serum amylase concentration and trypsin activity in serum were also significantly diminished (p less than 0.05). Prophylactic administration of 5 mg/kg body wt of FUT-175 showed a statistically significant decrease in the serum trypsin activity, but it did not improve the survival rate. Therapeutic administration of FUT-175 showed no favorable effect. FUT-175 showed protective effects on the course of severe acute pancreatitis only when given prophylactically at the beginning of the pancreatitis induced by the CDE diet.
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PMID:Effect of protease inhibitor FUT-175 on acute hemorrhagic pancreatitis in mice. 137 85

We examined the protective effect of human pancreatic secretory trypsin inhibitor (PSTI), a specific trypsin inhibitor secreted from pancreatic acinar cells into the pancreatic duct, on cerulein-induced acute pancreatitis in conscious rats. The protective effect of human PSTI-RS, an analogue of PSTI with Arg-44 to Ser substitution which has a longer half-life in vitro, was also examined. Intraperitoneal administration of a pharmacological dose of cerulein to conscious rats induced acute pancreatitis, characterized by light microscopy as cellular disorganization of the acini and interstitial edema. Intravenous infusion of human PSTI (10, 50 or 250 micrograms/rat/h) into rats with cerulein-induced acute pancreatitis decreased their pancreatic wet weight and plasma amylase concentration. It also caused a dose-dependent decrease in vacuoles in acinar cells and interstitial edema. Human PSTI-RS, which has a longer half-life in vivo, was more effective than native PSTI at the same dose rate (10 micrograms/rat/h) in reducing pancreatitis. These results suggest that human PSTI may have a beneficial effect on acute pancreatitis.
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PMID:Protective effect of human pancreatic secretory trypsin inhibitor on cerulein-induced acute pancreatitis in rats. 145 47

The therapeutic effect and the mechanism of action of the synthetic trypsin inhibitor camostate were studied in a rat model of acute interstitial pancreatitis induced by four subcutaneous injections of 20 micrograms/kg body weight of cerulein at hourly intervals. Rats with acute pancreatitis were given either 100 mg/kg body weight camostate or volume- and pH-adjusted water via an orogastric tube 30 min after the last cerulein injection. The elevation of serum amylase activity was significantly reduced by camostate treatment and the peak value was seen 1 hr earlier than that observed in the rats that did not receive camostate. Camostate also inhibited the reduction in pancreatic content of lipase and amylase seen during experimental pancreatitis. These effects were accompanied by alleviation of the histologic signs of acute pancreatitis such as cellular infiltration and acinar cell vacuolization. After oral administration, camostate and its metabolite were absorbed from the intestine and were detectable in plasma for more than 6 hr in concentrations high enough to have antiprotease activity. In addition, camostate in the duodenum was able to increase pancreatic juice flow and protein output and to stimulate endogenous secretin release. These results suggest that oral administration of camostate reduces the severity of cerulein-induced acute pancreatitis by releasing endogenous secretin and by its antiprotease activity.
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PMID:Beneficial effects of the synthetic trypsin inhibitor camostate in cerulein-induced acute pancreatitis in rats. 774 26

Small doses of an exogenous protein inhibitor of proteinases ovomucoid, isolated from duck egg-white, exhibited distinct therapeutic effects in acute pancreatitis of dogs. The inhibitor decreased the lethality rate and exceeded the base Kunitz trypsin inhibitor in its efficiency.
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PMID:[The effect of exogenous protein--a proteinase inhibitor--on the development of experimental pancreatitis in dogs]. 207 22

To confirm that trypsin activity is a most important initiating factor in closed duodenal loop pancreatitis in rats, we observed the course of acute pancreatitis when trypsinogen activation was inhibited by intraduodenal infusion of a potent synthetic trypsin inhibitor (TI, nafamostat mesilate) but the other conditions were left unchanged. Intraduodenal and intrapancreatic trypsinogen activation was inhibited for 16 hr after the intraduodenal infusion of the inhibitor, although elevation of serum amylase and immunoreactive trypsin and pancreatic trypsinogen remained similar both in the TI and control groups. The mortality decreased from 44% (control) to 4% (TI) at 48 hr after establishing the model. Active trypsin in duodenal reflux is an initiating factor for further development of acute pancreatitis in the closed loop model, and inhibition of the initial activation of trypsinogen has a favorable effect on acute pancreatitis even if other deleterious factors remain unchanged.
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PMID:Prevention of experimental acute pancreatitis by intraduodenal trypsin inhibitor in rat. 234 14

We examined the protective effects of the trypsin inhibitor, urinastatin, extracted from human urine in experimental acute pancreatitis in conscious rats. Acute pancreatitis was induced by four subcutaneous injections of 20 micrograms/kg body weight of cerulein at hourly intervals. Urinastatin at a dose of 50,000 U/kg body weight/6.5 h was given by continuous i.v. infusion beginning 0.5 h before the first cerulein injection and continuing until 3 h after the last one, for a total of 6.5 h. Urinastatin significantly reduced serum levels of amylase, lipase, and anionic trypsin(ogen) but did not affect pancreatic wet weight or protein or enzyme content. Urinastatin also significantly reduced the degree of acinar cell vacuolization, interstitial edema, and cellular infiltration. These results suggest that urinastatin does not block the induction of acute pancreatitis by cerulein but does substantially reduce its severity.
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PMID:The protective effect of the trypsin inhibitor urinastatin on cerulein-induced acute pancreatitis in rats. 245 95


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