Louis Fridhandler
University of California, Irvine
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Featured researches published by Louis Fridhandler.
Annals of Internal Medicine | 1973
R. W. Ammann; J. Edward Berk; Louis Fridhandler; Masatoshi Ueda; W. Wegmann
Abstract Two patients with pronounced hyperamylasemia and hyperamylasuria, associated with metastatic carcinoma of the lung, are described. The primary lung tumor in the one patient with tissue ava...
Annals of Surgery | 1974
Richard Morrissey; J. Edward Berk; Louis Fridhandler; Daniel Pelot
Total serum amylase activity was found to be significantly elevated postoperatively in 11 (10%) of 110 patients undergoing various surgical procedures. Isoamylase analysis revealed that the rise was chiefly in the pancreatic-type isoamylase in seven of the 11 patients showing postoperative serum amylase elevations; in the other four patients, the elevation occurred principally in the salivary-type isoamylase. These data demonstrate that postoperative hyperamylasemia occurs surprisingly often and that serum amylase activity may rise even when the surgical procedure is extra-abdominal. Moreover, elevation of serum amylase activity after surgery is not necessarily an indication of pancreatitis and may reflect instead a rise in salivary-type isoamylase.
The New England Journal of Medicine | 1972
Diana Barrows; J. Edward Berk; Louis Fridhandler
IDENTIFICATION of macroamylasemia1 has up to now been confined to patients with hyperamylasemia. The possibility that macroamylasemia exists in asymptomatic subjects and in persons with normal seru...
Digestive Diseases and Sciences | 1979
J. Edward Berk; Julio A. Ayulo; Louis Fridhandler
The study here reported was undertaken to assess the value of assay of the specific isomylase form arising from the pancreas (P-type) as an index of pancreatic exocrine insufficiency. Measurements were made of serum total amylase activity, serum P-type isoamylase activity, and the amount of P-type isoamylase relative to creatinie (Upam/Ucr) in the urine in a series of patients with clinically suspected chronic pancreatitis and pancreatic insufficiency as determined from the pancreatic secretory response to secretin stimulation. Abnormally low values for P-type isoamylase in the serum and urine of these patients were infrequent. Conversely, values within the normal ranges for serum P-type isoamylase and Upam/Ucr were common. It is concluded that while subnormal values for P-type isoamylase in the serum and urine may be viewed as supportive evidence for pancreatic insufficiency, failure to find such values does not exclude this condition.
Annals of Internal Medicine | 1979
J. Edward Berk; Louis Fridhandler; Russell Ness
Excerpt Impaired renal function may be associated with rises in serum amylase activity (1-5) and the ratio of amylase clearance to creatinine (Cam/Ccr) (3, 4, 6). These deviations cloud the interpr...
Digestive Diseases and Sciences | 1976
Junnosuke Shimamura; Louis Fridhandler; J. Edward Berk
SummaryIsoamylase anaysis of the serum and urine of a patient with anaplastic spindle cell carcinoma of the pancreas revealed that virtually all of the serum amylase and almost all of the urine amylase behaved chromatographically as the salivary (S) type. Both the serum and urine amylases were bound by a substance derived from a macroamylase complex which had been shown to bind only salivary amylase and to lack any affinity for pancreatitis (P) type amylase. The ratio of amylase to creatinine clearance was markedly increased (12.5%) without evidence of acute pancreatitis at autopsy and despite the presence of only a minute amount of P-type isoamylase in the serum.
Cancer | 1976
Junnosuke Shimamura; Louis Fridhandler; J. Edward Berk
Hyperamylasemia and hyperamylasuria were found in two patients with carcinoma of the pancreas and in two other patients with carcinoma of the lung. Detailed isoamylase analyses were conducted on the serum amylase of three and the urine amylase of all four of these patients, using a modified chromatographic procedure. The studies demonstrated the existence, in one of the lung cancer patients and in one of the patients with pancreatic cancer, of an unusual component of amylase given the designation “Y.” This component had also been noted in some human milk samples. In one of the lung cancer patients, an isoamylase was found in the serum and urine after radiation treatment that was close to but not identical to the Y isoamylase in chromatographic position. Although a relationship of isoamylase component Y to generating tissue is suggested by these findings, such a relationship remains to be proven.
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1975
Rudolph Kaiser; J. Edward Berk; Louis Fridhandler
Study of the behavior of serum amylase activity in 200 preganant women in various stages of pregnancy indicated that: (1) serum amylase rises gradually during pregnancy until the twenty-fifth week and thereafter falls slightly; (2) serum amylase values may be found in normal pregnant women during the second and third trimesters that exceed those in normal men and nonpregnant women; (3) during the second trimester of pregnancy there may be an alteration in the relative distribution of the pancreatic and salivary-type isoamylases with the salivary type tending to dominate. Knowledge of these changes is of importance in the clinical assessment of serum amylase values in pregnant women complaining of abdominal pain and other symptoms suggestive of complicating acute pancreatitis. An explanation for the observed changes is not readily available and further study is required.
Clinica Chimica Acta | 1971
Masatoshi Ueda; J. Edward Berk; Louis Fridhandler; James Davis
Abstract Sedimentation coefficients of the amylases present in the sera of 22 patients with macroamylasemia were measured by means of sucrose density gradient ultracentrifugation using beef liver catalase (11.3 S) and the 7 S serum proteins as markers. The sedimentation coefficients of the macroamylases in 18 of the cases ranged from 7.7 S to 10.7 S; in four cases the activity peaks were too broad to assign a definite sedimentation coefficient. One exceptional case (Case 6) exhibited two peaks of amylase activity: one had a sedimentation coefficient greater than the 19 S serum proteins and the other a coefficient of 10.7 S. The normal-size amylase component seen on dextran gel filtration was no longer discernible after ultracentrifugation in eight of the cases. These observations, in contrast to those on the paper electrophoretic pattern of those sera, suggest that the macroamylase complexes in patients with macroamylasemia are not homogeneous. The observations also indicate that dextran gel filtration may lead to erroneous concepts regarding the component fractions of serum amylase and their molecular sizes because of interaction between amylase and dextran.
Clinica Chimica Acta | 1980
Louis Fridhandler; J. Edward Berk
A simplified and relatively rapidly performed chromatographic method for measuring the principal isoamylases in serum and urine has been developed. It is hoped that this method may help make isoamylase analysis more readily applicable in the ordinary clinical setting.