TY - JOUR KW - Cells, Cultured KW - Diagnosis, Differential KW - Female KW - Genes, Dominant KW - Humans KW - Macrophages KW - Middle Aged KW - Molecular Weight KW - Monocytes KW - Peptidyl-Dipeptidase A AU - Okabe T AU - Fujisawa M AU - Watanabe J AU - Yotsumoto H AU - Takaku F AB -
We report here a familial clustering of elevated serum angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) levels. The patient was a 58-year-old Japanese female. She had been in excellent health until the age of 45, when she noticed a decrease in visual acuity of her left eye. Despite intensive therapy under the diagnosis of occulusion of the central retinal vein, she lost her visual acuity at the age of 45. Thereafter, she has been in excellent health. The only abnormality found in this case has been a markedly elevated level of serum ACE (625 n mol/min/ml; normal range; 22-40 n mol/min/ml of serum). Her blood pressure was within normal limits (140/80 mmHg). There was no evidence for the diagnosis of sarcoidosis, Gaucher's disease, leprosy, hyperthyroidism, diabetic retinopathy, or liver disease. One of her two sisters also showed a marked increase in serum ACE activity (303 n mol/min/ml), and remarkably high levels of serum ACE (276 and 294 n mol/min/ml) were demonstrated in both of two sons of this sister. All the members of this family have been in excellent health. The serum ACE activity was activated by chloride and cobalt ions, and inhibited by EDTA, captopril and rabbit antiserum to purified human plasma ACE. Thus, our study showed a familial clustering of "hyper-ACE-emia", and the disorder appears to have been inherited as an autosomal dominant trait.
BT - Japanese journal of medicine C1 - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/3041080?dopt=Abstract DA - 1987 May DO - 10.2169/internalmedicine1962.26.140 IS - 2 J2 - Jpn. J. Med. LA - eng N2 -We report here a familial clustering of elevated serum angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) levels. The patient was a 58-year-old Japanese female. She had been in excellent health until the age of 45, when she noticed a decrease in visual acuity of her left eye. Despite intensive therapy under the diagnosis of occulusion of the central retinal vein, she lost her visual acuity at the age of 45. Thereafter, she has been in excellent health. The only abnormality found in this case has been a markedly elevated level of serum ACE (625 n mol/min/ml; normal range; 22-40 n mol/min/ml of serum). Her blood pressure was within normal limits (140/80 mmHg). There was no evidence for the diagnosis of sarcoidosis, Gaucher's disease, leprosy, hyperthyroidism, diabetic retinopathy, or liver disease. One of her two sisters also showed a marked increase in serum ACE activity (303 n mol/min/ml), and remarkably high levels of serum ACE (276 and 294 n mol/min/ml) were demonstrated in both of two sons of this sister. All the members of this family have been in excellent health. The serum ACE activity was activated by chloride and cobalt ions, and inhibited by EDTA, captopril and rabbit antiserum to purified human plasma ACE. Thus, our study showed a familial clustering of "hyper-ACE-emia", and the disorder appears to have been inherited as an autosomal dominant trait.
PY - 1987 SP - 140 EP - 6 T2 - Japanese journal of medicine TI - Familial hyper-angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE)-emia: increased production of ACE by monocyte-macrophage. VL - 26 SN - 0021-5120 ER -