Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (cirrhosis)
42,195 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Serum activities of lysosomal enzymes beta-glucuronidase and acid phosphatase were serially estimated in 14 patients with and without cirrhosis of the liver who underwent 40% to 80% hepatic resection. Substantial increases in enzyme activities were observed two to eight weeks after operation in ten of 11 patients who did not suffer from postoperative liver failure. Regeneration of the residual livers was almost satisfactory in all 11, as evidenced by clinical, roentgenologic, and histologic findings. In three patients with advanced cirrhosis who died of hepatic failure 21 to 39 days after extensive hepatic resection, there was neither the enzymatic reaction nor evidence of regeneration of the liver remnants. In the light of this study and our previous experimental studies, serial determination of the lysosomal enzyme activities in blood is probably a beneficial biochemical index for detection of progressive hepatic regeneration.
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PMID:Release of lysosomal enzymes after partial hepatectomy: study of patients with and without cirrhosis of the liver. 628 36

In a survey the present possibilities are outlined to get knowledge about diseases of inner organs with the help of enzyme determinations in the urine. Here it is remarkable that changes of the enzyme excretion appear not only in renal disease with acute renal failure, pyelonephritis, glomerulonephritis, renal infarction and nephroptosis but are also to be observed in primarily extrarenal diseases such as diabetes mellitus, hyperthyroidism, thesaurismoses, myocardial infarction, hypertension, acute pancreatitis, epidemic hepatitis, liver cirrhosis, obstructive jaundice and rheumatoid arthritis. The causes of the changes of enzyme excretions are various. Since enzymes of different origin and localisation behave themselves variably, the simultaneous determination of a brush border marker (e.g. alanine aminopeptidase), a lysosomal enzyme (e.g. beta-glucuronidase or N-acetyl glucosaminidase) and a low molecular enzyme (e.g. lysozyme) is of use for the recognition of renal alterations. By the control of activities of urinary enzymes it is possible to get without risk informations about pathobiochemical processes in the kidney which are not to be gained by means of other methods.
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PMID:[Urinary enzyme excretion in diseases of the internal organs]. 636 87

Sera from 9 persons with either biopsy-proven alcoholic liver disease or a history of chronic, excessive ethanol consumption were analyzed for their content of various hydrolases. Compared to controls, significant elevations in the following enzyme activities were seen in sera from the patient population: acid phosphatase (2.0-fold), beta-glucuronidase (2.1-fold), hexosaminidase (1.4-fold), and alpha-L-fucosidase (2.3-fold). In addition, alpha-mannosidase activity, previously reported to be unchanged in cases of hepatic cirrhosis [Reglero et al., Clinica chim. Acta 130: 155-158], (1980) was found to be significantly increased (p less than 0.001) when assays were performed at acid (pH 4.5) or intermediate (pH 5.5) hydrogen ion concentrations. Fractionation of sera on DEAE-Sephadex columns showed that the increase in alpha-mannosidase activity in the serum of patients with alcoholic liver disease was due to increases in the level of at least one 'acid alpha-mannosidase' and two intermediate pH optimum alpha-mannosidases. The general increase in the activity of a group of glycosidases is consistent with a hypothesis involving decreased clearance of glycoproteins from the blood of persons with hepatic cirrhosis.
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PMID:Serum alpha-mannosidase in patients with alcoholic liver disease. 671 94

Optimal enzyme/substrate ratios were studied to estimate the activity of lysosomal glycosaminoglycan (GAG) hydrolases in homogenate and supernatant fractions of liver tissue. The modified procedures enabled, without any loss in sensitivity, to decrease the amount of biological material in samples on estimation of hyaluronidase, beta-glucuronidase and N-acetyl-beta-D-hexosaminidase; concentration of substrate was also decreased in mixtures containing hexosaminidase. Under conditions of experimental cirrhosis total and, especially, non-sedimented activities of GAG-hydrolases as well as the rate of the enzymes penetration through lysosomal membranes were increased in liver tissue.
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PMID:[Estimation of glycosaminoglycan hydrolases in liver tissue]. 683 50

Homogenates of liver from cases of hepatic cirrhosis due to alpha 1-antitrypsin deficiency (PiZZ) alcoholism were analyzed for their content of various lysosomal enzymes. Also determined were the specific activities of lactate dehydrogenase, glutamate-oxaloacetate transaminase, glutamate-pyruvate transaminase, and creatine phosphokinase in the extracts of liver from cases of both kinds of hepatic cirrhosis: all of these activities were within the range of control values. Similarly, the specific activities of the following lysosomal hydrolases were unremarkable: acid phosphatase, beta-mannosidase, beta-fucosidase, beta-glucuronidase and beta-glucosidase. Hexosaminidase specific activity was increased twofold in livers from the cases of cirrhosis due to alpha 1-antitrypsin deficiency. The specific activity of alpha-mannosidase (measured at pH 4.5) in homogenates of livers from PiZZ individuals with cirrhosis and those with alcoholic cirrhosis was increased two- to four-fold. Chromatography of the high-speed supernatant fraction from homogenates of livers of cirrhotic and noncirrhotic individuals on columns of DEAE-cellulose resolved alpha-mannosidase activity into two components: under the conditions employed, acid pH optimum (pH 4.5) alpha-mannosidase did not bind to the resin, whereas intermediate pH optimum (pH 5.5) alpha-mannosidase could be eluted with 0.1 mol/l NaCl. Liver from one case of (PiZZ) alpha 1-antitrypsin deficiency and emphysema, without demonstrable cirrhosis, was found to contain normal levels of both acid alpha-mannosidase and intermediate alpha-mannosidase. However, cases of cirrhosis due to alpha 1-antitrypsin deficiency contained twice as much acid alpha-mannosidase and only one third to one fourth as much intermediate alpha-mannosidase as controls. The deficiency in hepatic intermediate alpha-mannosidase was also observed in 5 of 5 cases of alcoholic cirrhosis.
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PMID:Altered alpha-mannosidase isoenzymes in the liver in hepatic cirrhosis. 697 51

Monocyte function has been studied in a total of 51 patients with biopsy-proven cirrhosis and 35 controls. There was significantly reduced monocyte spreading (p less than 0.05), chemotaxis (p less than 0.02), bacterial phagocytosis (p less than 0.05) and bacterial killing (p less than 0.02) in the cirrhotics compared to the controls. Monocytes from patients with cirrhosis produced significantly less of the lysosomal enzymes N-acetyl beta-glucosaminidase and beta-glucuronidase than those obtained from the controls (p less than 0.02). There was no significant difference in the number of monocytes obtained, the number of macrophage precursors, and the nitro-blue tetrazoline (NBT) reduction between the cirrhotic and the controls. The reduced function appeared to be mainly due to a circulating inhibitory factor and could be corrected by incubation of the cirrhotic cells in serum from control subjects. The response of monocytes from patients with cirrhosis did not differ from the controls in their response to added endotoxin or latex particles suggesting that they are capable of a normal response in the absence of the inhibitory factor. Paired specimens of portal and systemic serum were collected from patients with no evidence of liver disease undergoing vascular surgery. When added to normal human monocytes the portal serum caused a significant reduction in bacterial killing (p less than 0.02) and chemotaxis (p less than 0.05) compared to results obtained in the paired systemic serum. Mixing experiments suggests the presence of an active inhibitor in the portal serum. The results suggest that monocyte function is reduced in cirrhosis apparently due to a serum inhibitor which may have originated from the portal vein. The abnormalities may account in part for the increased susceptibility of these patients to infection.
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PMID:Monocyte function in cirrhosis. 711 29

beta-glucoronidase (EC 3.2.1.31) is a lysosomal enzyme catylysing the decomposition of beta-D-glucoronides--compounds arising as a result of the combination of beta-D-glucoronic acid and a number of compounds both exo- and endogenous, containing hydroxylic, carboxylic, amine, imine or thiol groups. The most common test evaluating the activity of the enzyme is that using phenolphtalein glucoronide as a biosynthetic substrate. The freed aglycons are colorimetrically assayed. The activity of beta-glucoronidase increases in many pathological conditions: liver infammations, cirrhosis of the liver, inflammations of other organs, cholestatic jaundice, tuberculosis, sarcoidosis and also in neoplasms. Many authors point to beta-glucoronidase as a sensitive indicator signalling cell damage.
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PMID:Beta-glucuronidase in physiology and disease. 1532 23

The present study was undertaken to determine whether there is any alteration in the activities of lysosomal enzymes in the liver and sera of rats during the course of carbon tetrachloride (CCl4) induced cirrhosis in rats. Cirrhosis was induced by the chronic administration of carbon tetrachloride plus phenobarbitone. N-acetyl glucosaminidase, P-glucuronidase and acid phosphatase were assayed spectrophotometrically in the liver homogenates and in the sera at different stages of liver injury i.e., necrosis, fibrosis, and cirrhosis. Significant increase in the "basal" activities of N acetyl glucosaminidase, beta-glucuronidase, and acid phosphatase were observed in the livers of rats during the course of development of cirrhosis. As the liver injury progressed from necrosis to cirrhosis, the 'free' activities of these three enzymes also increased. The 'total' activities of the enzymes studied were either decreased or remained unaltered. The increased 'free' activities of the lysosomal enzymes in the liver of CCl4 treated rats may contribute to cellular autophagy and tissue catabolism, which may subsequently lead to cirrhosis.
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PMID:Lysosomal enzyme activity during development of carbon tetrachloride induced cirrhosis in rats. 1552 60


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