Clinical and biochemical features of transient hyperphosphatasemia of infancy and early childhood are reviewed in 21 patients we have studied and in a further 93 cases reported in the literature. The diagnosis is suggested by the finding of an increased activity of alkaline phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.1) in plasma, typically more than fivefold the adult upper reference limit, in a child under five years of age, without evidence of liver or bone disease. The condition is confirmed by the presence of a characteristic pattern of alkaline phosphatase isoenzymes and by the normalization of the enzyme's activity in plasma within approximately three months. The etiology of the condition and possible mechanisms of the enzyme increase are discussed.
A test kit (Iso-ALP, Boehringer Mannheim) for measuring human bone alkaline phosphatase activity in serum or plasma was evaluated in five laboratories in three countries. The assay is based on the principle described by Rosalki and Foo (Clin Chem 1984;30:1182-6) and uses wheat germ lectin to precipitate bone alkaline phosphatase. Residual ALP in the supernate in comparison with total ALP is used to quantify the bone fraction. The imprecision of residual ALP measurement was low (median between-run CV 4.9%) and comparable with that of total ALP. Linearity of precipitation was demonstrable up to a bone ALP activity (diethanolamine buffer 37 degrees C) of 2000 U/L, though a matrix effect was observed for dilutions of high-activity sera in saline or bovine serum albumin. For assaying patients' samples, different batches of lectin demonstrated excellent comparability. Taking electrophoresis as a basis for standardization, we determined that the lectin precipitated approximately 90% of bone ALP, but < 5% of nonbone ALP. From this we derived serum/plasma upper reference limits for bone ALP activity in adults and children.
We describe two new methods for the separation and quantification of the bone and liver isoenzymes of alkaline phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.1) in plasma. In the first, we use wheat-germ lectin to precipitate the bone isoenzyme. About 80% of this, but minimal liver isoenzyme, is precipitated. The activity of the bone isoenzyme is calculated from measuring the alkaline phosphatase activity in the precipitate, that of liver alkaline phosphatase by subtracting the activity of the bone isoenzyme from total alkaline phosphatase activity. The liver fraction will also contain biliary, intestinal, and placental alkaline phosphatase if these are present in the original plasma, but correction for such activity is readily made. In the second method, samples are separated on cellulose acetate membranes that, before electrophoresis, have been soaked in buffer containing wheat-germ lectin. The bone isoenzyme is retarded and clearly separated from the liver fraction, allowing these isoenzymes to be quantified by densitometry. Both methods are rapid, reproducible, and suitable for use in the diagnostic laboratory.
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