(22) AMY - PANCREATIC ENZYMES Flashcards
- Systematic name: a-1,4-glucan, 4-glucohydroalse
- Smallest enzyme in plasma (therefore it is normally filtered in glomerulus)
- Digestive enzyme that catalyzes the breakdown of starch & glycogen via α, 1-6 branching linkages
o Specifically breaks down polysacchs
Amylase
Amylase Major tissue sources:
Pancreas, Salivary gland
Amylase Minor tissue sources:
Adipose tissues, Small Intestine, Skeletal muscles, Fallopian tube
acute pancreatitis, renal failure & parotitis (parotid gland is a major salivary gland)
Pathologic ↑ AMS:
Amylase is used in the diagnosis of acute pancreatitis: rises ____ after the attack, peaks at ___, and normalizes after ____.
Amylase is used in the diagnosis of acute pancreatitis: rises 2-12 hrs after the attack, peaks at 24 hours, and normalizes after 3-5 days.
fastest to elevate after onset of attack in px w/ acute pancreatitis
Amylase
↑plasma AMY = ↑Urine AMY
(how long in urine? Remains elevated for up to 7 days).
Acute pancreatitis
↑plasma AMY = ↓urine AMY
Normally excreted substances cannot be excreted in urine in pxs w/ renal dsz.
Renal dsz
Note:
Despite the quick elevation in acute pancreatitis, AMY is still not specific to AP.
Salivary Amylase:
Ptyalin (fast moving)
Pancreatic Amylase:
Amylopsin (slow moving)
Measures the disappearance of starch substrate
Amyloclastic
Amyloclastic
AMY activity is inversely proportional to absorbance of the test.
↑AMY activity = ↓color rxn (vice versa) = ↓absorbance reading
Substrate: Starch
Starch-Iodine Complex (Dark-blue) → ↓in color intensity
* Alternative substrate if no starch: lipogen
Iodine + lipogen = mahogany brown product
- Measures the appearance of the product
- Measurement of reducing sugar is directly proportional to the activity of AMY to the polysacc substrate
Saccharogenic
Starch → reducing sugars (ex. glucose)
- Measures the increasing color from production of product – chromogenic dye fragment
- AMY activity is directly proportional w/ the absorbance
Chromogenic
Insoluble starch-dye → soluble starch-dye fragments