Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P17174 (aspartate aminotransferase)
14,872 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Hepatic injury in alcoholics due to intake of acetaminophen (APAP or acetylparaaminophenol) with therapeutic intent has been reported, but the extent of the phenomenon is not clear, pertinent details of the association remain insufficiently clarified, and the importance of the phenomenon is not widely appreciated. The present report describes 67 patients who developed hepatic injury after ingestion of APAP with therapeutic intent. All were regular users of alcohol. Sixty-four percent of the patients were considered to be "alcoholic" or reported intakes greater than 80 g/d, 35% took 60 g/d or less, and the remainder were vague in their reporting. Doses of APAP were in the "nontoxic" range ( < 6 g/d) in 60% of the group, within the recommended range ( < 4 g/d) in 40%, and at 4.1 to 6 g/d in 20%. Characteristic feature was the towering level reached by aspartate transaminase (AST) with figures ranging from 3,000 to 48,000 IU in more than 90% of cases. Almost 20% of the patients died. The data on these patients were similar to 94 cases of injury from APAP taken with therapeutic intent reported in the literature. This study provides further evidence of hepatic injury in regular uses of alcohol, especially chronic alcoholics, who take APAP with therapeutic intent. Susceptibility is presumably caused by induction of cytochrome P-4502EI by ethanol and by depletion of glutathione (GSH) because of the effects of alcohol, the malnutrition often associated with alcoholism, and the depletion associated with chronic use of APAP and impaired glucuronidation caused by fasting perhaps as well. The syndrome of liver injury is distinctive, marked by uniquely elevated levels of AST, and poses a significant threat.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Acetaminophen (paracetamol) hepatotoxicity with regular intake of alcohol: analysis of instances of therapeutic misadventure. 765 81

In rats that received a low protein isocaloric diet (protein content of the diet: 8 instead of 20%) during fetal life and thereafter up to the time of sacrifice at 12-13 weeks of age, a low plasma insulin concentration, a decreased insulin content of isolated pancreatic islets, and an impaired secretory response of the islets to either D-glucose or the association of L-leucine and L-glutamine coincided, in islet homogenates, with a low activity of the mitochondrial glycerophosphate dehydrogenase and an abnormally high ratio between glutamate-alanine and glutamate-aspartate transaminase activities. Opposite enzymatic changes were found in liver extracts of the same rats. No obvious change in these hormonal, secretory, and enzymatic variables were observed when the period of protein deficiency was restricted to fetal life. These findings support the view that, in protein malnutrition, an impaired activity of pancreatic B-cell mitochondrial glycerophosphate dehydrogenase contributes, possibly in association with other enzymatic anomalies, to the perturbation of islet function.
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PMID:Impaired activity of rat pancreatic islet mitochondrial glycerophosphate dehydrogenase in protein malnutrition. 775 Apr 86

Six serum enzymes, alkaline phosphatase, cholinesterase, lactate dehydrogenase, aspartate aminotransferase, alanine aminotransferase and gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase were studied in 30 cases of protein energy malnutrition (PEM). The mean serum values of alkaline phosphatase, cholinesterase and lactate dehydrogenase in cases of PEM were significantly lower than the controls, lowering being maximum in PEM Grade IV. The mean serum values of aspartate aminotransferase and alanine aminotransferase in patients with PEM were significantly higher than the controls. The mean serum values of gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase showed similar significant rise in all but PEM Grade IV. The degree of increase in the serum values of these three enzymes were maximum in cases with PEM Grade I. These findings suggest that abnormalities in blood levels of these enzymes occur in any form of PEM and these are related to the severity of the disease.
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PMID:Serum enzyme abnormalities in protein energy malnutrition. 828 27

Clinical and biochemical parameters associated with the removal of the peritoneal catheter and death following continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD) peritonitis were analyzed in 120 episodes of peritonitis. Episodes resulting in catheter removal (n = 24, 20%) and those ending in patient death (n = 12, 10%) were respectively compared with episodes in which peritoneal catheters were saved and from which the patients survived. Variables associated with catheter removal included advanced age, long duration of peritonitis, coexisting exit-site/tunnel infection, infection caused by pseudomonas or fungi, elevated aspartate aminotransferase (AST) and malnutrition at presentation with peritonitis (serum albumin 29.5 +/- 7.6 g/L vs 33.8 +/- 4.8 g/L in episodes in which the catheters were saved, p = 0.014), and worsening malnutrition during peritonitis. Variables associated with death from peritonitis included diabetes mellitus, persistence of the infection, removal of the peritoneal catheter, infection with pseudomonas, malnutrition prior to the infection (serum albumin 29.5 +/- 3.2 g/L vs 34.7 +/- 4.2 g/L in survivors, p < 0.001), presentation with elevated AST and worsening malnutrition, and the development of pronounced malnutrition during infection (serum albumin 18.1 +/- 4.1 g/L vs 28.9 +/- 5.8 g/L in survivors, p < 0.001). Deaths were caused primarily by cardiovascular events. Both removal of the peritoneal catheter and death as consequences of CAPD peritonitis are associated with malnutrition and pseudomonas infection. In addition, death is more frequent in diabetic patients.
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PMID:Peritoneal catheter loss and death in continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis peritonitis: correlation with clinical and biochemical parameters. 839 4

We clustered a selected population of patients at Bridgeport (Conn) Hospital into distinct nutritional classes using critical decisions points for the serum concentrations of aspartate aminotransferase activity, cholesterol, total protein, albumin, and prealbumin. The decision points that divided the populations with the highest efficiency were delineated by the information in the data set. At these decision values the hospital population adjusted malnutrition rate was just more than 30%. This was lower than the reported prevalence of malnutrition in the hospital population and was better in agreement with global estimates of malnutrition. The study identified a problem in the assignment of decision values that are used for nutritional support which has implications for nutritional interventions.
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PMID:Determination of malnutrition in hospitalized patients with the use of a group-based reference. 842 68

Serum concentrations of the enzymes creatine kinase (CK) and aspartate aminotransferase (AST) were measured in captive and wild mallards (Anas platyrhynchos) as indicators of muscle damage. Baseline values for both enzymes were determined from six captive male mallards. During winter 1990 to 1991, six diets (including controls) representative of food available in the Mississippi alluvial valley were fed to captive female mallards housed in an outdoor aviary at the White River National Wildlife Refuge, Arkansas County, Arkansas (USA). Controlled handling of penned mallards resulted in elevated serum CK (means = 1,352 IU/liter; SD = 1,212) and AST (means = 101 IU/liter; SD = 95) concentrations consistent with myopathies. These serum enzyme elevations were not affected (P > 0.3) by dietary selenium concentrations in the six diets or by energy malnutrition suffered by birds fed soybeans. Capture of wild mallards with an entanglement type rocket net resulted in serum CK and AST concentrations (means = 12,035 and 330 IU/liter; SD = 8,125 and 171, respectively) that were higher (P < 0.001) than those reported after capture with an enveloping type rocket net. Baseline values, controlled handling values, and entanglement rocket net values for serum CK and AST all differed (P < 0.0001).
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PMID:Serum enzymes as indicators of capture myopathy in mallards (Anas platyrhynchos). 848 81

A twenty-year-old woman with anorexia nervosa (body mass index=11) suffered from severe liver dysfunction (aspartate aminotransferase 5,000 IU/l, alanine aminotransferase 3,980 IU/l, prothrombin time 32%), hypoglycemia (serum glucose 27 mg/dl), and pancreatic dysfunction (amylase 820 IU/l, lipase 558 IU/l). She fell into a depressive state with irritability, which was not improved by intravenous glucose. Despite treatment with plasmapheresis for the liver dysfunction, she subsequently developed pulmonary edema, acute renal failure, gastrointestinal bleeding, and disseminated intravascular coagulation. Hemodialysis, mechanical ventilation and drug therapy including prednisolone, prostaglandin E1, and branched-chain amino acid, improved her critical condition. In this case, malnutrition may have been the cause for the liver dysfunction and subsequent complications.
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PMID:Anorexia nervosa with severe liver dysfunction and subsequent critical complications. 1043 64

Birds have evolved alternate physiologic strategies to contend with dehydration, starvation, malnutrition, and reproduction. Basic anatomic and functional differences between birds and mammals impact clinical chemistry values and their evaluation. Interpretation of the results of standard biochemical analyses, including BUN, alanine aminotransferase, aspartate aminotransferase, creatine kinase, gamma glutamyltransferase, bilirubin, ammonia, alkaline phosphatase, cholesterol, bile acids, glucose, albumin, globulins, calcium, phosphorus, prealbumin (transthyretin), fibrinogen, iron, and ferritin, is reviewed and discussed in relation to these physiological differences. The use and interpretation of alternative analytes appropriate for avian species, such as uric acid, biliverdin, glutamate dehydrogenase, and galactose clearance, also are reviewed. Normal avian urine and appropriate use of urinalysis, an integral part of laboratory diagnosis in mammalian species that frequently is omitted from avian diagnostic protocols, is discussed.
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PMID:Clinical chemistry of companion avian species: a review. 1218 2

Acetaminophen is used as an analgesic and antipyretic. Due to its relative safety at therapeutic dose, it is frequently used in children and in pregnant women. We evaluated the effect of a dose equivalent to the therapeutic dose of Acetaminophen in undernourished rats; 72 Wistar male rats of 18 weeks of age, with weight between 270 and 280 g, were distributed randomly in four groups: A, normal without food restriction; B, normal without food restriction treated with Acetaminophen (100 mg/kg); C; undernourished by food restriction and D, undernourished by food restriction treated with Acetaminophen (100 mg/kg). The results showed decreasing of body and hepatic weight in undernourished rats and in undernourished treated with Acetaminophen, significant decrease of serum albumin concentration (p < 0.001). It was demonstrated that activity of the enzymes alanine aminotransferase (ALT), aspartate aminotransferase (AST) and alkaline phosphatase significantly decreased (p < 0.001) in the group of undernourished rats treated with Acetaminophen compared with the other groups. We concluded that the Acetaminophen induces hepatic lesions in undernourished rats treated with a single non toxic dose of 100 mg/kg of weight, probably as a consequence of the inherent susceptibility to malnutrition.
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PMID:[Modification of liver enzymes in undernourished rats treated with acetaminophen]. 1463 61

The effects of pumpkin seed (Cucurbita pepo) protein isolate on the activity levels of lactate dehydrogenase (LD), alanine transaminase (ALT), aspartate transaminase (AST) and alkaline phosphatase (ALP) against carbon tetrachloride (CCl4)-induced acute liver injury in low-protein fed rats were investigated. A group of male Sprague-Dawley rats maintained on a low-protein diet for 5 days were divided into three subgroups. Two subgroups were injected with carbon tetrachloride and the other group with an equivalent amount of olive oil. Two hours after CCl4 intoxication one of the two subgroups was administered with pumpkin seed protein isolate. All three subgroups of rats were maintained on the low-protein diet for the duration of the investigation. Groups of rats from the different subgroups were killed at 24, 48 and 72 h after their respective treatments. After 5 days on the low-protein diet the activity levels of all four enzymes were significantly higher than their counterparts on a normal balanced diet. CCl4 intoxication resulted in significant increases in the activity levels of all four enzymes investigated. The administration of pumpkin seed protein isolate after CCl4 intoxication resulted in significantly reduced activity levels of all four enzymes. It is concluded that pumpkin seed protein isolate administration was effective in alleviating the detrimental effects associated with protein malnutrition.
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PMID:Effect of pumpkin seed (Cucurbita pepo) protein isolate on the activity levels of certain plasma enzymes in CCl4-induced liver injury in low-protein fed rats. 1604 32


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