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Query: UMLS:C0030305 (
pancreatitis
)
16,014
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We propose a rapid enzymatic micromethod for the specific determination of lipase (EC 3.1.1.3) activity in serum and duodenal fluid. Free linoleic acid produced during 10-min incubation of 10 mul of sample with 1 ml of substrate (trillinolein emulsion) at 30 degrees C is converted by lipoxygenase (EC 1.99.2.1), in a coupled reaction, to its hydroperoxide, which is measured photometrically after solubilizing the reaction mixture in ethanol.
Lipase
activity is calculated from the rate of hydroperoxide formation, with linoleic acid as primary standard. The velocity of the reaction is greatest at pH 8.8, 35-37 degrees C, and a deoxycholate concentration of 3.6 mmol/liter. The energy of activation is 6.7 kcal/mol. The differing "apparent" Km values obtained for lipase in undiluted serum (4 X 10(-5) mol/liter) and in albumin-based diluents (1 X 10(-5) mol/liter) indicate the presence of a competitive inhibitor in the serum matrix. We detected no lipase activity in urine. Results by the proposed method correlate well with those by a copper soap extraction method (r = 0.95), but values are significantly higher for
pancreatitis
patients' sera (slope 1.6). The linear dynamic range extends to 1000 U/liter. Hemolysis, lipemia, and hyperbilirubinemia do not interfere. The normal range is 40-60 U/liter.
Lipase
activity of
pancreatitis
patients generally exceed 1000 U/liter during the acute phase and 250 U/liter for as long as 10 days after it.
...
PMID:Lipoxygenic micromethod for specific determination of lipase activity in serum and duodenal fluid. 1 45
In 21 female Beagle dogs an experimental
pancreatitis
was induced by injection of bile into the pancreatic duct system. Beside controls, dogs received 62.5 micrograms/h cyclic somatostatin (SRIF) a continuous i.v. infusion starting with a bolus of 250 micrograms 15 minutes before or 2 hours after bile injection. Following blood parameters were determined: lipase, amylase, blood count, minerals, glucose, insulin, gastrin, secretin and CCK. Two controls died within 24 hours, the others were sacrificed after 48 hours. All pancreata were examined morephologically. The controls developed all clinical signs of acute hemorrhagic
pancreatitis
, whereas all SRIF-treated dogs were in much better general condition.
Lipase
and amylase increased in all groups. In the controls insulin, gastrin and secretin remained unchanged and CCK rose slightly. SRIF-treatment diminished insulin, CCK and the test meal-induced increase of secretin. At autopsy the pancreata of the controls were nearly entirely apoplectic. The SRIF-treated dogs showed less damage of the pancreas and no severe hemorrhagic necrosis was noted. The beneficial effect of SRIF cannot only be due to an interaction with intestinal hormones. An additional direct protective effect on the exocrine parenchyma is proposed to exist.
...
PMID:Effect of somatostatin on bile-induced acute hemorrhagic pancreatitis in the dog. 39 59
Severe necrotizing
pancreatitis
is accompanied by release of hemorrhagic ascites fluid (HAF), which is thought to be related to the occurrence and frequency of cardiocirculatory and pulmonary failure as a consequence of acute pancreatitis. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the role of HAF due to these systemic complications. Experiments were performed in 25 pigs (mean b.wt. 22 +/- 1 kg) under general anesthesia and mechanical ventilation. The animals received 50 ml/kg b.wt. i.p. of either physiologic saline solution (control CO, n = 9) or hemorrhagic ascites fluid (HAF, n = 16). HAF was obtained from 16 pigs with
pancreatitis
induced by intraductal infusion of bile salt. Eight animals in the HAF group were pretreated with indomethacin (10 mg/kg i.v. INDO/HAF). All animals were followed up for 6 h. Mean arterial pressure, cardiac output, and stroke volume fell significantly in the HAF (-25%, -27%, -27%) and in the INDO/HAF groups (-24%, -20%, -17%) as compared with controls (-6%, -6%, -6%). Also, left ventricular end-diastolic pressure (LVEDP) decreased by 52% and 48% in both HAF recipient groups, whereas LVEDP was unchanged in the control group. Myocardial contractility (Vmax) remained unaltered in all experimental groups. No significant differences in gas exchange and lung dry/wet weight ratio were observed.
Lipase
and PGI2 of the unpretreated HAF group rised to 203% and 198% in arterial blood at 6 h compared with unaltered levels in the control group. No increase of prostanoid concentrations was detected in the indomethacin-pretreated group, whereas lipase increase by a comparable extent as in the HAF group. We conclude that the early consequences of HAF are mainly characterized by systemic hypotension due to hypovolemia.
...
PMID:Hemodynamic effects following intraperitoneal infusion of pancreatic ascites fluid. 141 Aug 1
Pancreatic juice and serum from patients with acute pancreatitis contain three enzymes that have lipolytic activity: L1 and L2, which are pancreatic isoenzymes or isoforms of lipase (EC 3.1.1.3), and L3, which is probably pancreatic carboxyl ester lipase, also known as cholesterol esterase (EC 3.1.1.13). These enzymes are readily separated electrophoretically on agarose and can be developed with an overlay of Kodak Ektachem lipase slide material. The latter acts as a dry-reagent developing substrate, with the enzymes producing blue bands in the slide material. We found L1 in about one-half of normal persons, L2 in none, and L3 in all. We assayed for amylase (EC 3.2.1.1), amylase isoenzymes, lipase, and lipase isoforms in the sera of 100 patients with suspected acute pancreatitis. L2 lipase has the greatest diagnostic efficiency for the diagnosis of
pancreatitis
, compared with total amylase, P3 amylase, and total lipase.
Lipase
and L2 could replace amylase, an inefficient test, for the diagnosis of patients with suspected acute pancreatitis. In patients receiving organ transplants, a serum amylase value of greater than 300 U/L or a lipase of greater than 1000 U/L discriminated well between patients with and without complications and (or) acute rejection.
...
PMID:Lipase isoforms and amylase isoenzymes: assays and application in the diagnosis of acute pancreatitis. 170 30
The relative merits of various serum pancreatic enzymes, ultrasonography (US), and computerized tomography (CT) have been evaluated. In practice, the diagnosis of acute pancreatitis (AP) remains hinged on the clinical picture and elevated serum amylase. The advantages of total serum amylase are its technical simplicity, ready availability, and sensitivity. Within 24 h of onset of symptoms, elevation of amylase is as sensitive as that of lipase, pancreatic isoamylase, immunoreactive trypsin, or elastase. However, after the first hospital day, it is the least sensitive of the enzymatic tests. Its greatest disadvantage is its overall low specificity.
Lipase
assays are now fast, reliable, practical, more specific, almost as sensitive, and not more expensive than amylase assays. The current feeling is that lipase assays should be used more often or even should replace amylase assays. However, comparative studies using objective criteria for AP are required to evaluate the utility of lipase estimations over that of amylase. Other enzymes such as P-isoamylase, immunoreactive trypsin, chymotrypsin, or elastase are more cumbersome, expensive, and not better than lipase. They should be reserved for cases of doubtful diagnoses. The levels of these pancreatic enzymes neither correlate with the severity of the disease nor can they accurately predict the subsequent clinical course of the patients. The main role of ultrasonography remains in the evaluation of the biliary tract in AP. The contrast-enhanced computed tomography (CECT) is useful for estimating the presence and extent of pancreatic necrosis. Thereby, it enables prompt recognition of patients at high risk for systemic and local complications. Routine use of CECT may aid in the identification of
pancreatitis
when enzyme elevations are modest, but the utility of the procedure in all clinically mild cases is questionable. Patients who are seriously ill or who present a diagnostic problem should have a CECT. A normal CT under such circumstances excludes clinically severe AP. Serial CT should be done in patients demonstrating phlegmonous extrapancreatic spread.
...
PMID:Evaluating tests for acute pancreatitis. 218 90
To differentiate between
pancreatitis
in patients with chronic renal insufficiency and uremic pancreopathy we investigated 23 patients with chronic renal insufficiency, 28 patients on hemodialysis before and after treatment and 13 patients after renal transplantation. As controls served 15 healthy people. The total amylase in serum is significantly elevated in patients with chronic renal insufficiency regardless if they were treated with hemodialysis or not. This elevation is due to an elevation of the pancreatic isoenzyme. The testing of both isoamylases (pancreatic and salivary) does not contribute to a better diagnosis. Patients with chronic renal insufficiency show a lower concentration of the amylases in their urine than their healthy controls.
Lipase
and creatinin show a linear correlation in serum. In the individual case it is not possible to draw a definite diagnostic conclusion using the above mentioned parameters because of the wide distribution of the measured values.
...
PMID:[Amylase and lipase as reference values for the differential diagnosis of chronic kidney failure and pancreatitis]. 241 87
Serum was obtained from 55 patients, including 43 with stable chronic renal failure (CRF) (28 receiving chronic hemodialysis [CHD] and 15 receiving chronic ambulatory peritoneal dialysis [CAPD]), nine with peritonitis receiving CAPD, and three with
pancreatitis
receiving CAPD. Total serum amylase activity, lipase activity, isoamylase fractionation, and lipase concentration were used to measure pancreatic enzymes. Amylase activity was increased in 35 of 43 patients with CRF but was greater than threefold elevated in only three. Pancreatic isoamylase activity was greater than 80% in only one patient with CRF but was greater than 80% in all three patients with
pancreatitis
receiving CAPD.
Lipase
activity was increased in 26 patients and lipase concentration was elevated in 27. Peritoneal fluid from three patients with
pancreatitis
receiving CAPD contained high levels of amylase. Serum amylase and lipase are frequently elevated in patients with CRF in the absence of clinical
pancreatitis
. However, serum amylase activity greater than threefold elevated or the presence of pancreatic enzymes in the peritoneal fluid may suggest coexistent
pancreatitis
.
...
PMID:Pancreatic enzymes in chronic renal failure. 243 54
Amylase isoenzyme analysis by agarose gel electrophoresis and lipase concentration by radioimmunoassay were performed in 98 consecutive hyperamylasemic patients. Total pancreatic (P-type) isoamylase was elevated in 89% of patients with clinical evidence of
pancreatitis
, and in only 11% of those without
pancreatitis
. Of 43 patients in whom the clinical diagnosis was obscure, 44% demonstrated an increase in pancreatic amylase and three (7%) had an increase in salivary (S-type) amylase.
Lipase
concentration by radioimmunoassay correlated well with lipase activity (r = + 0.69, P less than 0.05) and was as effective as amylase isoenzymes in distinguishing patients felt likely to have
pancreatitis
from those who were unlikely. Amylase isoenzymes or serum lipase concentration may be useful tests in the laboratory evaluation of hyperamylasemia when the etiology is obscure.
...
PMID:Use of amylase isoenzymes in laboratory evaluation of hyperamylasemia. 243 67
Lipase
, in contrast to amylase, is completely reabsorbed by the proximal tubules after glomerular filtration. Therefore, no lipase is detectable in the unconcentrated urine according to the current opinion. The handling of lipase (detected with an enzyme-immunoassay) by the kidney was investigated in comparison with creatinine, amylase, and beta-2-microglobulin by clearance studies in acute pancreatitis (n = 10), burn injury (n = 4), glomerular proteinuria (n = 8), and controls without evidence of pancreatic or renal diseases (n = 5). In initial stages of acute pancreatitis a measurable clearance of lipase (mean: 49.6 microliters/min, range: 0.5-234) was found in association with corresponding increased clearances of beta-2-microglobulin (mean: 10.5 ml/min, range: 0.02-58.9) and of amylase (mean: 8.9 ml/min, range: 2.4-22.6) in nine of ten patients. This finding is consistent with a defect of tubular function. However, regression analysis failed to show a significant correlation between lipase and beta-2-microglobulin clearance. Repeated measurements during the course of
pancreatitis
in seven patients showed reversibility of tubular dysfunction. In patients with burn injury a similar elevation of clearances of beta-2-microglobulin and of amylase was found, but tubular dysfunction in this condition was not associated with lipasuria. In glomerular proteinuria a lipase clearance was found in two of five cases with moderate, and in the other three cases with severe impairment of creatinine clearance. beta-2-microglobulin clearance was normal in the former and only slightly elevated in the latter group. In conclusion lipase is measurable in the urine of most patients with acute pancreatitis as a result of a reversible tubular dysfunction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Lipasuria in acute pancreatitis: result of tubular dysfunction? 244 47
We investigated the incidence and possible mechanisms of postoperative hyperamylasemia in 101 patients after cardiac surgery. Amylase (EC 3.2.1.1) activities in serum were increased in 36% of patients after bypass surgery, 59% of patients after valve replacement, and in 69% of patients after combined bypass and valve replacement.
Lipase
(EC 3.1.1.3) activity was increased in 30% of all patients. We found enzymatic evidence for
pancreatitis
in six patients. Thirty-six patients showed increased salivary (S-type) amylase activity, with a positive correlation (r = 0.55, P less than 0.001) between the severity of pleural effusions and the peak S-type amylase activity. Hyperamylasemia after cardiac surgery is apparently often related to absorption of S-type amylase from pleural fluid and (or) from aspirated salivary secretions. Monitoring patients for postsurgical
pancreatitis
necessitates assay of amylase isoenzymes to distinguish abnormalities resulting in release of pancreatic (P-type) amylase from those involving release of S-type amylase.
...
PMID:Incidence and source of hyperamylasemia after cardiac surgery. 245 8
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