Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0740577 (acute abdominal pain)
1,982 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Total amylase and salivary (S) type isoamylase were measured in serum from 80 women with acute abdominal pain admitted to the Department of Gynecology. Fifty-seven patients had verified gynecologic diseases, including 21 patients with inflammation of the internal genitals and 11 with ectopic pregnancy. Twelve patients had an intrauterine pregnancy in the first trimester. None of the 80 patients showed hyperamylasemia.
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PMID:Serum amylase levels in gynecologic patients with acute abdominal pain. 141 93

We evaluated the diagnostic value of serum amylase, isoamylase, and lipase for the diagnosis of acute pancreatitis from sera of patients with acute abdominal pain. Comparison was first made in condition A between 32 patients with image-proven pancreatitis and 414 patients with nonpancreatic acute abdomen (the control group), then in condition B, between 62 pancreatitis patients with or without image proof and the control group. We found (a) that patients with image-proven pancreatitis suffer a more severe clinical course than those without; (b) that the sensitivity, positive predictive value, and accuracy in condition B are higher than in condition A at any cutoff level; (c) that none of the enzyme assays is specific at the upper reference limit, but their diagnostic yields are much improved by raising cutoff levels to about three or four times the upper limit; and (d) that at these selected cutoff levels, amylase had a diagnostic value similar to p-isoamylase or lipase in both conditions (sensitivity 84% and 92% for amylase in conditions A and B, respectively; specificity 98% and 98%; positive predictive value 75% and 90%; negative predictive value 99% and 99%; accuracy 91% and 97%). In conclusion, at an appropriately selected cutoff level, amylase can be effectively used as the first-line test and isoamylase or lipase as adjunct tests for acute abdominal conditions.
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PMID:Serum amylase, isoamylase, and lipase in the acute abdomen. Their diagnostic value for acute pancreatitis. 168 29

In 134 consecutive patients with acute abdominal pain, we evaluated the clinical role of a new rapid test for serum lipase based on latex agglutination. The results were compared with those obtained with a widely used lipase immunoassay as well as with serum amylase and pancreatic isoamylase measurements. Fifty-five healthy subjects were studied as controls. In 174 cases (121 patients and 53 controls) the results of the two lipase assays were in agreement. A positive lipase latex test was found in 10 of 12 patients with acute pancreatitis, in eight of 24 patients with other pancreatic diseases, and in 14 of 98 with nonpancreatic diseases. The sensitivity and specificity of this test were similar to those of the other pancreatic enzyme assays performed. The results indicate that the lipase latex agglutination test is useful for emergency screening for acute pancreatitis in patients with acute abdominal pain.
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PMID:A rapid assay for serum immunoreactive lipase as a screening test for acute pancreatitis. 356 30

In 849 patients (417 men, 432 women) consecutively hospitalized with acute abdominal pain we compared the value of serum cathodic trypsin-like immunoreactivity, pancreatic lipase (EC 3.2.1.3) and pancreatic isoamylase (EC 3.2.1.1) as diagnostic tests for acute pancreatitis. The diagnoses of acute pancreatitis (in 49 patients, 5.8%) and other diseases were made without knowledge of these enzyme values. When evaluated by means of receiver operating characteristic curves no differences were found in diagnostic performance of the three enzymes. Use of combinations of different enzymes had no advantage over single enzyme determination using discrimination analysis for evaluation. The highest efficiency was for all three enzymes 0.991 (95% confidence limits: 0.983-0.995) and for all three enzymes the discrimination value giving this efficiency was several times the upper limit of reference range: 1 779 micrograms/l for cathodic trypsin-like immunoreactivity, 831 U/l for pancreatic isoamylase and 316 micrograms/l for pancreatic lipase. None of the enzymes had any prognostic value at admission in predicting a mild or severe attack of acute pancreatitis. In conclusion, no single enzyme or combination of enzymes had any diagnostic advantage for acute pancreatitis in patients with acute abdominal pain. Thus selection of one of the three enzymes as diagnostic test of acute pancreatitis is to be based on considerations such as economy, methodological simplicity, possibility of automated assay and the time-consumption at the assay.
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PMID:Evaluation and comparison of cathodic trypsin-like immunoreactivity, pancreatic lipase and pancreatic isoamylase in the diagnosis of acute pancreatitis in 849 consecutive patients with acute abdominal pain. 371 97

To determine the utility of serum amylase (AMY), lipase (Lp), pancreatic isoamylase (isoA), phospholipase A (PLA), and urine AMY in the diagnosis of acute pancreatitis, samples of serum and urine were obtained on admission and every day thereafter for 5 days from 384 patients with acute abdominal pain. Diagnostic accuracy, determined as the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve, was > 0.975 for serum AMY, Lp, isoA, and urine AMY. For each of these enzymes, a threshold value (twice to sixfold the upper limit of the reference values) offering diagnostic efficiency > 95% could be determined. In contrast, accuracy and efficiency of serum PLA were low. The profiles of these enzymes in acute pancreatitis decreased in a parallel fashion over 5 days except for PLA. We conclude that diagnostic utilities are similar for serum AMY, Lp, isoA, and urine AMY for acute pancreatitis, provided that an appropriate threshold is established.
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PMID:Amylase, lipase, pancreatic isoamylase, and phospholipase A in diagnosis of acute pancreatitis. 754 34

The usual reason for measuring serum amylase level is to confirm or exclude the diagnosis of pancreatitis. However, increases in serum amylase levels can occur in conditions other than pancreatitis and many of those conditions present with acute abdominal pain. In the case presented here, an unconscious patient developed a very high serum total amylase level, which was most likely due to hypoxemia and lactic acidosis secondary to an overdose of Tramadol (Nobligan) tablets. The patient was treated in the intensive care unit and had an uneventful recovery. Many diseases can cause acute elevation of serum amylase level. In lactic acidosis, the hyperamylasemia typically results from the presence of excessive salivary-type isoamylase. Therefore, isoamylase enzyme analysis is of great clinical value in the differential diagnosis of hyperamylasemia, especially in cases with concurrent lactic acidosis.
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PMID:Tramadol poisoning with hyperamylasemia. 2276 76