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Enzyme Diagnostics
Enzyme and Serum 
Enzymes –Complex protein catalysts, found in small amounts, 
cause specific chemical change in all parts of the body. Present in 
all parts of the body including: blood, intestinal fluids, mouth 
(saliva),stomach (gastric juice). 
-Normally only small quantities of intracellular enzymes leak 
from cells into blood or other body fluids. 
Serum- is the component that is neither a blood cell (serum 
does not contain white or red blood cells) nor a clotting factor; it 
is the blood plasma with the fibrinogens removed. Serum 
includes all proteins not used in blood clotting (coagulation) and 
all the electrolytes, antibodies, antigens and hormones.
Sources of non-functional enzymes 
•Cell damage 
•Obstruction of normal pathways: eg obstruction of bile 
duct increases alkaline phosphatase 
•Increase of the enzyme synthesis: eg Bilirubin increases 
the rate of synthesis of alkaline phosphatase in obstructive 
liver disease. 
•Increased permeability: eg hypoxia.
Medical importance of Non-functional 
enzymes 
Measurement of these enzymes is important for: 
•Diagnosis of diseases- as disease of different organs 
cause elevation of different plasma enzymes. 
•Prognosis of the disease- Follow up treatment pre and 
post measurement of enzymes
Serum Enzymes used for diagnostics
MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION
A heart attack -blood flow to a part of your heart is blocked ,part of the 
heart muscle is damaged or dies. The medical term for this is Myocardial 
infarction. 
SYMPTOMS 
• Chest pain- Pain restricted or may move from chest to your arms, shoulder, 
neck, teeth, jaw, belly area , back. 
Pain usually lasts longer than 20 minutes. 
Other symptoms- 
• Anxiety 
• Cough 
• Fainting 
• Light-headedness, dizziness 
• Nausea or vomiting 
• Palpitations (feeling like your heart is beating too fast or irregularly) 
• Shortness of breath 
• Sweating (which may be very heavy)
 CAUSES: 
• Blood clot that blocks one of 
the coronary arteries. The 
coronary arteries bring blood 
and oxygen to the heart. If the 
blood flow is blocked, the 
heart is starved of oxygen and 
heart cells die. 
• Plaque-A hard substance can 
build up in the walls of your 
coronary arteries. This plaque 
is made up of cholesterol and 
other cells.
• The most common cause of blocked arteries is atherosclerosis. Exact cause of 
atherosclerosis is unknown, but most researchers believe it begins with an injury 
to the innermost layer of the artery, known as the endothelium. 
 The following factors are thought to contribute to the damage: 
• High blood pressure 
• Elevated LDL ("bad") cholesterol 
• An accumulation of homocysteine (amino acid produced by the human body, 
thought to be a risk factor for heart disease, stroke, osteoporosis, diabetes, and 
dementia) 
• Smoking 
• Diabetes 
• Inflammation
• This is a normal coronary 
artery with a nice, big, 
unobstructed lumen for 
supplying plenty of blood 
to the myocardium. 
• At the left the lumen is 
about 50% occluded. At the 
right, there has been 
thrombosis with 
organization and 
recanalization to leave 
three small remaining 
lumens.
• This coronary artery 
demonstrates yellowish 
atherosclerotic plaques 
grossly. 
• Coronary artery opened 
longitudinally demonstrates 
severe atherosclerosis.
• 75% narrowing 
• Complete occlusion.
TESTS 
1.Troponin test 
• Composed of three regulatory proteins (troponin C, I and T) 
• Attached to tropomyosin ,found in the grooves between actin 
filaments in muscle tissue. 
• Found in skeletal and cardiac muscle but not smooth muscle. 
• Troponin I and T- Excellent markers for myocardial infarction 
• Serum levels of troponin I rise within 4-8 hrs after the onset of 
chest pains ,levels peak within 12-16 hrs ,return to baseline within 
5-9 days. 
• Measurement of serum LDH fractions was once considered the 
ideal marker for onset and severity of a heart attack, the high 
specificity of troponin I to heart muscle necrosis make this protein 
the preferred marker to measure in patients suspected of suffering 
a myocardial infarct.
• Normal Values 
• Cardiac troponin levels are normally so low they cannot be detected with 
most blood tests. 
• The test results are usually considered normal if the results are: 
• Troponin I : less than 10 μg/L 
• Troponin T : 0–0.1 μg/L 
• Normal troponin levels 12 hours after chest pain has started mean a heart 
attack is unlikely. 
• What abnormal results mean 
• Even a slight increase, usually means there has been some damage to the 
heart. Significantly high levels of troponin are a sign that a heart attack has 
occurred. 
• Most patients who have had a heart attack have increased troponin levels 
within 6 hours. After 12 hours almost everyone who has had a heart attack 
will have raised levels. 
• Troponin levels may remain high for 1 to 2 weeks after a heart attack.
Increased troponin levels may also be due to: 
• Abnormally fast heart beat 
• High blood pressure in lung arteries (pulmonary hypertension) 
• Blockage of a lung artery by a blood clot, fat, or tumor cells (pulmonary 
embolus) 
• Congestive heart failure 
• Inflammation of the heart muscle usually due to a virus (myocarditis) 
• Strenuous exercise (for example, due to marathons) 
• Trauma that injures the heart such as a car accident 
• Weakening of the heart muscle (cardiomyopathy) 
• Cardiac angioplasty/stenting 
• Purposeful shocking of the heart by medical personnel 
• Open heart surgery
2.Creatine Kinase (CK)/Creatine Phosphokinase (CPK) 
• Creatine Creatine Phosphate 
ATP ADP 
(Energy source for muscle contraction) 
• Dimer (consists of 2 protomers)-B (after brain) and M (after Muscle). 
• 3 Tissue specific isoenzymes: 
• CPK1 (CPK-BB) is the characteristic isoenzyme in brain and is in 
significant amounts in smooth muscle and is 0% of the normal serum total. 
• **It increases in brain tumors. 
• CPK2 (CPK-MB) accounts for about 35% of the CPK activity in cardiac 
muscle , but less than 5% in skeletal muscle and is 0% of the normal serum 
total. 
• **It increases in heart diseases.
• CPK3 (CPK-MM) is the predominant isoenzyme in muscle 
and is 100% of the normal serum total. 
• **It increases in skeletal muscle diseases 
• Found in heart, skeletal muscle, brain. 
• Level of CPK rises within 6hrs and peak by ~18hrs. 
• If not persistent, normal within 2-3 days. 
• CPK-MB levels rise 3-6 hrs after a myocardial infarction 
and peak 12-24 hrs later, returns to normal 12-48 hrs after 
the infarct.
• Normal Values: 
male: 5-35 ug/ml (mcg/ml); 
female: 5-25 ug/ml 
newborn: 10-300 IU/L 
• Precautions: 
• Draw the sample before giving or one hour after giving I.M. 
injections. I.M. injections will increase the total CK level. 
• Obtain the blood samples on schedule. Always note the time 
the sample was drawn and the hours elapsed since onset of 
chest pain. 
• Be sure to handle the sample gently to prevent hemolysis. 
Always have the sample transported to the lab promptly 
because CK activity diminishes significantly after 2 hours at 
room temperature.
3.Lactate dehydrogenase(LDH) 
Lactic acid Pyruvic acid 
NAD NADH+H 
• LDH is a tetramer(consists of 4 protomers)-H(after heart) and M(after 
muscle) 
• LDH has 5 isoenzymes:- 
• LD1 and LD2 -heart, red blood cells and kidneys. 
• LD3 –lungs 
• LD4 and LD5 -liver, skin, and skeletal muscles. 
• LDH elevates in 24-48 hours and peaks in 48-72 hours after the episode. 
• Narcotic drugs and IM injections can elevate serum LDH levels. Hemolysis 
of the blood can cause an elevated LDH because LDH is plentiful in the 
erythrocytes. 
• Because many common diseases increase total LDH (LD) levels, isoenzyme 
electrophoresis is usually necessary for diagnosis
4.SGOT 
• Serum Glutamic Oxaloacetic Transaminase called: AST, (Aspartate 
Aminotransferase) (is released with tissue necrosis). 
• Aspartate (Asp) + α-ketoglutarate ↔ oxaloacetate + glutamate (Glu) 
• Is an important enzyme in amino acid metabolism. 
• AST is found in the liver, heart, skeletal muscle, kidneys, brain and red blood cells. 
• Normal Values: 5-40 U/ml (Frankel) 4-36 IU/L; or 16-60 (Karmen) U/ml U/L 
at 30 degrees C; or 8-33 (SI units) at 37 degrees C. 
• Clinical Implications: 
• Elevation 8-12 hours after infarction. Peak levels are reached 24-48 hours 
after the MI. 
• This enzyme is not particularly indicative of an MI. Other conditions can also 
cause a rise in the levels. High levels of SGOT may be obtained with trauma to 
the skeletal muscles, in liver disease, pancreatitis and others. 
• *Decreased levels of enzyme are found in pregnancy, diabetes, beriberi. 
Elevations can be caused by hepatitis, trauma, musculoskeletal disease, IM 
injection, pancreatitis, liver cancer, and strenuous exercise.
5. SGPT 
• Serum Glutamic Pyruvic Transaminase- enzyme is called Alanine 
Transaminase (ALT) 
• α-ketoglutarate + L-alanine ⇌ L-glutamate + pyruvate 
• ALT is particularly diagnostic of liver involvement as this enzyme is found 
predominantly in hepatocytes. 
• Elevated levels of ALT (SGPT) = viral hepatitis, diabetes, congestive heart 
failure, liver damage, bile duct problems or myopathy. 
• ALT is commonly used as a way of screening for liver problems. 
• Elevated ALT may also be caused by dietary choline deficiency. 
• Fluctuation of ALT levels is normal over the course of the day, and ALT 
levels can also increase in response to strenuous physical exercise.
• Normally in liver disease or damage that is not of viral origin the ratio of 
ALT/AST is less than1. 
• With viral hepatitis the ALT/AST ratio will be greater than1. 
• level of AST elevation in the serum =number of cells involved 
• Following injury, levels of AST rise within 8 hours and peak 24–36 hours 
later. Within 3–7 days the level of AST should return to pre-injury levels 
unless further injury occurs. 
* Although measurement of AST is not, in and of itself, diagnostic for 
myocardial infarction, taken together with LDH and CK measurements the 
level of AST is useful for timing of the infarct
• Preventive Care: You can reduce your risk of heart attack by: 
• Quit smoking. 
• Aerobic exercise (such as walking, biking, or swimming) for at least 30 
minutes 5 days per week. 
• Reducing stress and learning stress-reduction techniques such as deep 
breathing and meditation. 
• Eating a diet low in saturated fat and rich in fruits, vegetables, and whole 
grains. 
• Losing weight or maintaining a proper weight. 
• Follow your doctor’s instructions to keep these risk factors under control. 
• Treatment Approach: 
• The goal when treating a heart attack is to restore blood flow to the 
affected area of the heart immediately, to preserve as much heart muscle 
and heart function as possible. If your doctor has prescribed nitroglycerin, 
take it while you are waiting for emergency medical personnel to arrive.
• Medications 
• When you arrive at the hospital, you will likely be given one or more 
medications to help your body cope with, or ward off, damage from the 
heart attack, including: 
• Aspirin -- helps stop blood from clotting. You may be given aspirin in the 
ambulance or as soon as you get to the hospital. Aspirin should be 
continued indefinitely at a dose of 81 mg per day. 
• Nitroglycerin -- helps dilate (widen) blood vessels. You may be given 
nitroglycerin in the ambulance or as soon as you get to the hospital. 
• Pain reliever -- helps relieve pain and is often given intravenously (IV). 
• Thrombolytic -- work to break up clots. They are most effective when 
taken within 2 hours of the heart attack, and are not given after 12 hours 
have elapsed. These drugs may be given with other anticoagulants (blood 
thinners). 
• Anticoagulants (blood thinners) -- make your blood less likely to form 
clots. Heparin is often given by injection while you are in the hospital.
• The prostate gland, which is 
associated with the 
production of sperm in men, 
secretes an enzyme called 
prostatic acid phosphatase 
(PAP). In all stages of 
prostate cancer, except the 
final stages, PAP levels are 
raised compared to those of 
healthy individuals.
ACID PHOSPHATASE 
• Hydrolase enzyme -catalyze the hydrolysis of a chemical bond. 
Specifically, it targets and breaks the molecular bonds of phosphate groups. 
• ACP can be found in certain organs and tissues, including blood cells, bone 
marrow, the spleen, pancreas, liver and kidneys. 
• Found in the greatest concentration in the prostate and up to 1,000 
times greater in seminal fluid than any other bodily fluid. 
• The latter fact is useful in forensics since the detection of prostatic acid 
phosphatase (PAP) in vaginal tissue measuring levels greater than 3 U/ML 
(units per milliliter) is used as supporting evidence that a rape has 
occurred. 
• It is stored in lysosomes and functions when these fuse with endosomes, 
which are acidified while they function; therefore, it has an acidic pH. 
• Normal Value: 
0 to 1.1 Bodanzky units/ml; 
1 to 4 King-Armstrong units/ml; 
0.13 to 0.63 BLB units/ml.
• Clinical Implications: 
• Appears primarily in the prostate gland and semen. It is also found 
in other organs, but in very small amounts. Prostatic and 
erythrocytic enzymes are the two major isoenzymes. 
• The prostatic isoenzyme is more specific for prostatic cancer. 
widespread the tumor=produce high serum acid phosphatase 
levels. 
• Marked increased acid phosphatase levels: A tumor that has 
spread beyond the prostatic capsule 
• Moderately increased acid phosphatase levels: Prostatic 
infarction, Paget's disease, Gaucher's disease, multiple myeloma 
• Declining high acid phosphatase levels: Successful treatment of 
prostatic cancer 
• Hemolysis due to rough handling of sample or improper storage 
may interfere with test results. 
• Acid phosphatase levels drop by 50% within one hour if the sample 
stays at room temperature without the addition of a preservative or 
if it is not packed in ice.
• Abnormal levels may indicate the presence of systemic 
infection, anemia, hepatitis. 
• Elevated levels of PAP in particular is associated 
with inflammation of the prostate, as well as prostate 
cancer that has metastasized to the bone. 
• Phosphatase testing is also used to assess enzymatic damage 
caused by kidney disease, liver disease, or a heart attack. 
• The blood sample is exposed to one of several agents to elicit 
an enzymatic reaction, namely 4-aminoantipyrine, or a 
solution of disodium phenyl phosphate and citrate. 
• To measure levels of PAP, tartrate is used. By observing the 
reaction with these different agents, the clinician is able to 
determine which tissue is releasing phosphatase enzymes 
into the bloodstream and what type they are. Usually, the test 
results are available within one to two days.
• The diagnostic precision of plasma enzyme analysis may be improved 
by: 
• 1. Estimation of more than one- For instance, although both alanine and 
aspartate transaminases are abundant in the liver, the concentration of 
aspartate transaminase is much greater than that of alanine transaminase in 
heart muscle 
• 2. Isoenzyme determination- Some enzymes exist in more than one form: 
these isoenzymes may be separated by their different physical or chemical 
properties. For example, creatine kinase may be derived from skeletal or 
cardiac muscle, but one of its isoenzymes is found predominantly in the 
myocardium 
• 3. Serial enzyme estimations- The rate of change of plasma enzyme 
activity is related to a balance between the rate of entry and the rate of 
removal from the circulation. A persistently raised plasma enzyme activity is 
suggestive of a chronic disorder or occasionally of impaired clearance.
• Factors Affecting Results of Plasma Enzyme Assays 
1. Analytical factors affecting results: 
• The total concentration of all plasma enzyme proteins is less than 1 g/L. 
Results of enzyme assays are not usually expressed as concentrations, but 
as activities. 
• The results of such measurements depend on many factors. These include 
the concentrations of the substrate and product, the pH and 
temperature at which the reaction is carried out, the type of buffer, and 
the presence of activators or inhibitors. 
• Because the definition of 'international units' does not take these factors 
into account, results from different laboratories, apparently expressed in 
the same units, may not be directly comparable. Therefore, plasma 
enzyme activities must be interpreted in relation to the reference ranges 
from the issuing laboratory.
2. Physiological factors affecting enzyme activities include 
for example: 
a. Age: Plasma AST activity is moderately higher during the 
neonatal period than in adults, plasma alkaline phosphatase 
activity is higher in children than in adults and peaks during 
the pubertal bone growth spurt before falling to adult levels. 
b. Sex: plasma γ-glutamyl transferase activity is higher in men 
than-in women. 
c. physiological conditions: Plasma alkaline phosphatase 
activity rises during the last trimester of pregnancy because of 
the presence of the placental isoenzyme: several enzymes, 
such as the transaminases and creatine kinase rise moderately 
in plasma during and immediately after labour or strenuous 
exercise.
ThanKYou!

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Enzymes in diagnostics

  • 2. Enzyme and Serum Enzymes –Complex protein catalysts, found in small amounts, cause specific chemical change in all parts of the body. Present in all parts of the body including: blood, intestinal fluids, mouth (saliva),stomach (gastric juice). -Normally only small quantities of intracellular enzymes leak from cells into blood or other body fluids. Serum- is the component that is neither a blood cell (serum does not contain white or red blood cells) nor a clotting factor; it is the blood plasma with the fibrinogens removed. Serum includes all proteins not used in blood clotting (coagulation) and all the electrolytes, antibodies, antigens and hormones.
  • 3.
  • 4. Sources of non-functional enzymes •Cell damage •Obstruction of normal pathways: eg obstruction of bile duct increases alkaline phosphatase •Increase of the enzyme synthesis: eg Bilirubin increases the rate of synthesis of alkaline phosphatase in obstructive liver disease. •Increased permeability: eg hypoxia.
  • 5. Medical importance of Non-functional enzymes Measurement of these enzymes is important for: •Diagnosis of diseases- as disease of different organs cause elevation of different plasma enzymes. •Prognosis of the disease- Follow up treatment pre and post measurement of enzymes
  • 6. Serum Enzymes used for diagnostics
  • 8. A heart attack -blood flow to a part of your heart is blocked ,part of the heart muscle is damaged or dies. The medical term for this is Myocardial infarction. SYMPTOMS • Chest pain- Pain restricted or may move from chest to your arms, shoulder, neck, teeth, jaw, belly area , back. Pain usually lasts longer than 20 minutes. Other symptoms- • Anxiety • Cough • Fainting • Light-headedness, dizziness • Nausea or vomiting • Palpitations (feeling like your heart is beating too fast or irregularly) • Shortness of breath • Sweating (which may be very heavy)
  • 9.  CAUSES: • Blood clot that blocks one of the coronary arteries. The coronary arteries bring blood and oxygen to the heart. If the blood flow is blocked, the heart is starved of oxygen and heart cells die. • Plaque-A hard substance can build up in the walls of your coronary arteries. This plaque is made up of cholesterol and other cells.
  • 10. • The most common cause of blocked arteries is atherosclerosis. Exact cause of atherosclerosis is unknown, but most researchers believe it begins with an injury to the innermost layer of the artery, known as the endothelium.  The following factors are thought to contribute to the damage: • High blood pressure • Elevated LDL ("bad") cholesterol • An accumulation of homocysteine (amino acid produced by the human body, thought to be a risk factor for heart disease, stroke, osteoporosis, diabetes, and dementia) • Smoking • Diabetes • Inflammation
  • 11. • This is a normal coronary artery with a nice, big, unobstructed lumen for supplying plenty of blood to the myocardium. • At the left the lumen is about 50% occluded. At the right, there has been thrombosis with organization and recanalization to leave three small remaining lumens.
  • 12. • This coronary artery demonstrates yellowish atherosclerotic plaques grossly. • Coronary artery opened longitudinally demonstrates severe atherosclerosis.
  • 13. • 75% narrowing • Complete occlusion.
  • 14. TESTS 1.Troponin test • Composed of three regulatory proteins (troponin C, I and T) • Attached to tropomyosin ,found in the grooves between actin filaments in muscle tissue. • Found in skeletal and cardiac muscle but not smooth muscle. • Troponin I and T- Excellent markers for myocardial infarction • Serum levels of troponin I rise within 4-8 hrs after the onset of chest pains ,levels peak within 12-16 hrs ,return to baseline within 5-9 days. • Measurement of serum LDH fractions was once considered the ideal marker for onset and severity of a heart attack, the high specificity of troponin I to heart muscle necrosis make this protein the preferred marker to measure in patients suspected of suffering a myocardial infarct.
  • 15. • Normal Values • Cardiac troponin levels are normally so low they cannot be detected with most blood tests. • The test results are usually considered normal if the results are: • Troponin I : less than 10 μg/L • Troponin T : 0–0.1 μg/L • Normal troponin levels 12 hours after chest pain has started mean a heart attack is unlikely. • What abnormal results mean • Even a slight increase, usually means there has been some damage to the heart. Significantly high levels of troponin are a sign that a heart attack has occurred. • Most patients who have had a heart attack have increased troponin levels within 6 hours. After 12 hours almost everyone who has had a heart attack will have raised levels. • Troponin levels may remain high for 1 to 2 weeks after a heart attack.
  • 16. Increased troponin levels may also be due to: • Abnormally fast heart beat • High blood pressure in lung arteries (pulmonary hypertension) • Blockage of a lung artery by a blood clot, fat, or tumor cells (pulmonary embolus) • Congestive heart failure • Inflammation of the heart muscle usually due to a virus (myocarditis) • Strenuous exercise (for example, due to marathons) • Trauma that injures the heart such as a car accident • Weakening of the heart muscle (cardiomyopathy) • Cardiac angioplasty/stenting • Purposeful shocking of the heart by medical personnel • Open heart surgery
  • 17. 2.Creatine Kinase (CK)/Creatine Phosphokinase (CPK) • Creatine Creatine Phosphate ATP ADP (Energy source for muscle contraction) • Dimer (consists of 2 protomers)-B (after brain) and M (after Muscle). • 3 Tissue specific isoenzymes: • CPK1 (CPK-BB) is the characteristic isoenzyme in brain and is in significant amounts in smooth muscle and is 0% of the normal serum total. • **It increases in brain tumors. • CPK2 (CPK-MB) accounts for about 35% of the CPK activity in cardiac muscle , but less than 5% in skeletal muscle and is 0% of the normal serum total. • **It increases in heart diseases.
  • 18. • CPK3 (CPK-MM) is the predominant isoenzyme in muscle and is 100% of the normal serum total. • **It increases in skeletal muscle diseases • Found in heart, skeletal muscle, brain. • Level of CPK rises within 6hrs and peak by ~18hrs. • If not persistent, normal within 2-3 days. • CPK-MB levels rise 3-6 hrs after a myocardial infarction and peak 12-24 hrs later, returns to normal 12-48 hrs after the infarct.
  • 19. • Normal Values: male: 5-35 ug/ml (mcg/ml); female: 5-25 ug/ml newborn: 10-300 IU/L • Precautions: • Draw the sample before giving or one hour after giving I.M. injections. I.M. injections will increase the total CK level. • Obtain the blood samples on schedule. Always note the time the sample was drawn and the hours elapsed since onset of chest pain. • Be sure to handle the sample gently to prevent hemolysis. Always have the sample transported to the lab promptly because CK activity diminishes significantly after 2 hours at room temperature.
  • 20. 3.Lactate dehydrogenase(LDH) Lactic acid Pyruvic acid NAD NADH+H • LDH is a tetramer(consists of 4 protomers)-H(after heart) and M(after muscle) • LDH has 5 isoenzymes:- • LD1 and LD2 -heart, red blood cells and kidneys. • LD3 –lungs • LD4 and LD5 -liver, skin, and skeletal muscles. • LDH elevates in 24-48 hours and peaks in 48-72 hours after the episode. • Narcotic drugs and IM injections can elevate serum LDH levels. Hemolysis of the blood can cause an elevated LDH because LDH is plentiful in the erythrocytes. • Because many common diseases increase total LDH (LD) levels, isoenzyme electrophoresis is usually necessary for diagnosis
  • 21. 4.SGOT • Serum Glutamic Oxaloacetic Transaminase called: AST, (Aspartate Aminotransferase) (is released with tissue necrosis). • Aspartate (Asp) + α-ketoglutarate ↔ oxaloacetate + glutamate (Glu) • Is an important enzyme in amino acid metabolism. • AST is found in the liver, heart, skeletal muscle, kidneys, brain and red blood cells. • Normal Values: 5-40 U/ml (Frankel) 4-36 IU/L; or 16-60 (Karmen) U/ml U/L at 30 degrees C; or 8-33 (SI units) at 37 degrees C. • Clinical Implications: • Elevation 8-12 hours after infarction. Peak levels are reached 24-48 hours after the MI. • This enzyme is not particularly indicative of an MI. Other conditions can also cause a rise in the levels. High levels of SGOT may be obtained with trauma to the skeletal muscles, in liver disease, pancreatitis and others. • *Decreased levels of enzyme are found in pregnancy, diabetes, beriberi. Elevations can be caused by hepatitis, trauma, musculoskeletal disease, IM injection, pancreatitis, liver cancer, and strenuous exercise.
  • 22. 5. SGPT • Serum Glutamic Pyruvic Transaminase- enzyme is called Alanine Transaminase (ALT) • α-ketoglutarate + L-alanine ⇌ L-glutamate + pyruvate • ALT is particularly diagnostic of liver involvement as this enzyme is found predominantly in hepatocytes. • Elevated levels of ALT (SGPT) = viral hepatitis, diabetes, congestive heart failure, liver damage, bile duct problems or myopathy. • ALT is commonly used as a way of screening for liver problems. • Elevated ALT may also be caused by dietary choline deficiency. • Fluctuation of ALT levels is normal over the course of the day, and ALT levels can also increase in response to strenuous physical exercise.
  • 23. • Normally in liver disease or damage that is not of viral origin the ratio of ALT/AST is less than1. • With viral hepatitis the ALT/AST ratio will be greater than1. • level of AST elevation in the serum =number of cells involved • Following injury, levels of AST rise within 8 hours and peak 24–36 hours later. Within 3–7 days the level of AST should return to pre-injury levels unless further injury occurs. * Although measurement of AST is not, in and of itself, diagnostic for myocardial infarction, taken together with LDH and CK measurements the level of AST is useful for timing of the infarct
  • 24. • Preventive Care: You can reduce your risk of heart attack by: • Quit smoking. • Aerobic exercise (such as walking, biking, or swimming) for at least 30 minutes 5 days per week. • Reducing stress and learning stress-reduction techniques such as deep breathing and meditation. • Eating a diet low in saturated fat and rich in fruits, vegetables, and whole grains. • Losing weight or maintaining a proper weight. • Follow your doctor’s instructions to keep these risk factors under control. • Treatment Approach: • The goal when treating a heart attack is to restore blood flow to the affected area of the heart immediately, to preserve as much heart muscle and heart function as possible. If your doctor has prescribed nitroglycerin, take it while you are waiting for emergency medical personnel to arrive.
  • 25. • Medications • When you arrive at the hospital, you will likely be given one or more medications to help your body cope with, or ward off, damage from the heart attack, including: • Aspirin -- helps stop blood from clotting. You may be given aspirin in the ambulance or as soon as you get to the hospital. Aspirin should be continued indefinitely at a dose of 81 mg per day. • Nitroglycerin -- helps dilate (widen) blood vessels. You may be given nitroglycerin in the ambulance or as soon as you get to the hospital. • Pain reliever -- helps relieve pain and is often given intravenously (IV). • Thrombolytic -- work to break up clots. They are most effective when taken within 2 hours of the heart attack, and are not given after 12 hours have elapsed. These drugs may be given with other anticoagulants (blood thinners). • Anticoagulants (blood thinners) -- make your blood less likely to form clots. Heparin is often given by injection while you are in the hospital.
  • 26. • The prostate gland, which is associated with the production of sperm in men, secretes an enzyme called prostatic acid phosphatase (PAP). In all stages of prostate cancer, except the final stages, PAP levels are raised compared to those of healthy individuals.
  • 27. ACID PHOSPHATASE • Hydrolase enzyme -catalyze the hydrolysis of a chemical bond. Specifically, it targets and breaks the molecular bonds of phosphate groups. • ACP can be found in certain organs and tissues, including blood cells, bone marrow, the spleen, pancreas, liver and kidneys. • Found in the greatest concentration in the prostate and up to 1,000 times greater in seminal fluid than any other bodily fluid. • The latter fact is useful in forensics since the detection of prostatic acid phosphatase (PAP) in vaginal tissue measuring levels greater than 3 U/ML (units per milliliter) is used as supporting evidence that a rape has occurred. • It is stored in lysosomes and functions when these fuse with endosomes, which are acidified while they function; therefore, it has an acidic pH. • Normal Value: 0 to 1.1 Bodanzky units/ml; 1 to 4 King-Armstrong units/ml; 0.13 to 0.63 BLB units/ml.
  • 28. • Clinical Implications: • Appears primarily in the prostate gland and semen. It is also found in other organs, but in very small amounts. Prostatic and erythrocytic enzymes are the two major isoenzymes. • The prostatic isoenzyme is more specific for prostatic cancer. widespread the tumor=produce high serum acid phosphatase levels. • Marked increased acid phosphatase levels: A tumor that has spread beyond the prostatic capsule • Moderately increased acid phosphatase levels: Prostatic infarction, Paget's disease, Gaucher's disease, multiple myeloma • Declining high acid phosphatase levels: Successful treatment of prostatic cancer • Hemolysis due to rough handling of sample or improper storage may interfere with test results. • Acid phosphatase levels drop by 50% within one hour if the sample stays at room temperature without the addition of a preservative or if it is not packed in ice.
  • 29. • Abnormal levels may indicate the presence of systemic infection, anemia, hepatitis. • Elevated levels of PAP in particular is associated with inflammation of the prostate, as well as prostate cancer that has metastasized to the bone. • Phosphatase testing is also used to assess enzymatic damage caused by kidney disease, liver disease, or a heart attack. • The blood sample is exposed to one of several agents to elicit an enzymatic reaction, namely 4-aminoantipyrine, or a solution of disodium phenyl phosphate and citrate. • To measure levels of PAP, tartrate is used. By observing the reaction with these different agents, the clinician is able to determine which tissue is releasing phosphatase enzymes into the bloodstream and what type they are. Usually, the test results are available within one to two days.
  • 30. • The diagnostic precision of plasma enzyme analysis may be improved by: • 1. Estimation of more than one- For instance, although both alanine and aspartate transaminases are abundant in the liver, the concentration of aspartate transaminase is much greater than that of alanine transaminase in heart muscle • 2. Isoenzyme determination- Some enzymes exist in more than one form: these isoenzymes may be separated by their different physical or chemical properties. For example, creatine kinase may be derived from skeletal or cardiac muscle, but one of its isoenzymes is found predominantly in the myocardium • 3. Serial enzyme estimations- The rate of change of plasma enzyme activity is related to a balance between the rate of entry and the rate of removal from the circulation. A persistently raised plasma enzyme activity is suggestive of a chronic disorder or occasionally of impaired clearance.
  • 31. • Factors Affecting Results of Plasma Enzyme Assays 1. Analytical factors affecting results: • The total concentration of all plasma enzyme proteins is less than 1 g/L. Results of enzyme assays are not usually expressed as concentrations, but as activities. • The results of such measurements depend on many factors. These include the concentrations of the substrate and product, the pH and temperature at which the reaction is carried out, the type of buffer, and the presence of activators or inhibitors. • Because the definition of 'international units' does not take these factors into account, results from different laboratories, apparently expressed in the same units, may not be directly comparable. Therefore, plasma enzyme activities must be interpreted in relation to the reference ranges from the issuing laboratory.
  • 32. 2. Physiological factors affecting enzyme activities include for example: a. Age: Plasma AST activity is moderately higher during the neonatal period than in adults, plasma alkaline phosphatase activity is higher in children than in adults and peaks during the pubertal bone growth spurt before falling to adult levels. b. Sex: plasma γ-glutamyl transferase activity is higher in men than-in women. c. physiological conditions: Plasma alkaline phosphatase activity rises during the last trimester of pregnancy because of the presence of the placental isoenzyme: several enzymes, such as the transaminases and creatine kinase rise moderately in plasma during and immediately after labour or strenuous exercise.