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Troponin - this is an enzyme only found in heart muscle tissue. When damage occurs (as in a heart attack) the muscle will release troponin into the bloodstream.
Physicians expect to find increasing levels of lactate dehydrogenase (ldh).
This occurs when dead pancreatic tissue, blood, white blood cells, enzymes, and fluid that has leaked from the circulatory system accumulates.
epithelial tissue
The area is known as a foci of necrotic tissue, eventually turning into fibrosed (scar) tissue. The process by which this occurs is tissue ischaemia (where not enough oxygen is supplied to the heart tissue to meet its requirements).
leptin
No, cardiac enzymes, such as CK, CKMB and troponin are proteins that help a cardiac cell function. When the cell is damaged, such as by a myocardial infarction, the cells die, and these proteins are liberated from the cell into the bloodstream where we can detect them and determine there has been cardiac cell death.
Macrophage
No. All enzymes are proteins but not all proteins are enzymes. Muscle tissue is made of protein but it is not made of enzymes.
a basement membrane occurs between the epithelial tissue and the connective tissue
Many cells produce enzymes all over the body, so the answer depends on what the enzymes are. They could be the result of over-production (such as in the case of a hyperactive gland, a tumour or a genetic disease) or they could be released due to tissue damage (such as in heart attack, liver disease, muscle atrophy).
tissue repair