Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0001339 (acute pancreatitis)
10,593 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Single random samples of urine were collected from 50 control subjects; 27 patients with chronic pancreatitis; 19 with acute pancreatitis; 6 with acute on chronic pancreatitis; five in the recovery phase of acute attack; four patients with pseudocysts. Salivary (S) and pancreatic (P) amylase values were measured by cellulose acetate electrophoresis. The P amylase values always exceeded those of S amylase in the control specimens. In acute pancreatitis, both the lower and upper levels of total and P amylase were considerably higher than in the controls, and these high values tended to return to normal during the recovery phase of acute pancreatitis. The S amylase values were often very low or undetectable during the acute phase. Values for P amylase exceeded control values in patients with pseudocysts even in the presence of chronic pancreatitis. In chronic calcific pancreatitis, S amylase was higher than P amylase. We conclude that P amylase is always greater than S amylase in normal urine specimens, and a change in this pattern may be helpful in diagnosing various forms of pancreatitis.
...
PMID:P amylase is always greater than S in spot urine of normal subjects. Diagnostic implications. 138 8

An example of acute pancreatitis developing five weeks after initial treatment with 5-aminosalicylic acid (5-ASA) and methylprednisolone for severe Crohn's disease is reported in a 37 year old female patient. She had undergone cholecystectomy for gall stones some years earlier. There was no evidence of acute or chronic pancreatitis. No morphological changes of the upper gastrointestinal tract were found except for some irregularity of the main pancreatic duct and the secondary ducts on endoscopic retrograde pancreatography. Rechallenge with 5-ASA did not induce recurrent pancreatitis or changes in pancreatic enzymes. This case report supports the concept of an association between acute pancreatitis and Crohn's disease.
...
PMID:Acute pancreatitis complicating Crohn's disease: mere coincidence or causality? 138 73

A human pancreatic cDNA library was screened with the cDNA encoding rat "pancreatitis-associated protein" (PAP). The selected clone encoded a secretory protein structurally related to rat PAP. The protein had the same size as rat PAP and showed 71% amino acid identity, the six half-cystines being in identical positions. Domains of the proteins showing homologies with calcium-dependent lectins were also conserved. In addition, expression in pancreas of the genes encoding the human protein and rat PAP showed similar characteristics: both were expressed at very low levels in control tissue and overexpressed during the acute phase of pancreatitis, contrary to most secretory products. The human protein was therefore named human pancreatitis-associated protein (PAP-H). Antibodies raised to a synthetic peptide of PAP-H detected a single band with an M(r) compatible with PAP-H in Western blot analysis of proteins extracted from a pancreas presenting with acute pancreatitis. In that tissue, the protein could be immunolocalized to the apical regions of acinar cells. An immunoassay was also constructed to quantify the protein in serum. Elevated PAP-H levels were observed in patients with acute pancreatitis and in some patients with chronic pancreatitis. Values were close to background in healthy subjects and in patients with other abdominal diseases. These results confirm that PAP-H synthesis increases during inflammation and suggest a possible use of the protein as biological marker of acute pancreatitis.
...
PMID:Human pancreatitis-associated protein. Messenger RNA cloning and expression in pancreatic diseases. 146 87

Oxygen-derived free radicals mediate an important step in the initiation of experimental acute pancreatitis. Thereby these reactive oxygen metabolites are generated at an early stage of disease. The source of the enhanced production of oxygen radicals remains unclear. Experimentally, the efficiency of scavenger treatment varied between different models, whereby these differences were depending on the experimental model and not on the form of pancreatitis which was induced. Most studies pretreated the experimental animals before inducing acute pancreatitis. This does not mirror the clinical reality, since patients are admitted to the hospital after onset of the disease. It was shown in Cerulein-pancreatitis, however, that scavenger treatment also mitigated the pancreatic tissue damages after induction of acute pancreatitis. Moreover, antioxidant treatment also attenuated the extrapancreatic complications, thus improving the final outcome of the disease. The first indirect observations also suggest that in human acute recurrent and chronic pancreatitis oxygen free radicals are generated and add to the damages seen. Therefore, well-defined controlled clinical studies with patients suffering from acute pancreatitis are needed to validate the role of oxygen radicals in this disease.
...
PMID:[Oxygen radicals and acute pancreatitis]. 147 89

The pathophysiology of pancreatic autodigestion is poorly understood. Pancreatitis affects all age groups, and the diagnosis is sometimes missed when serum amylase and lipase activities are not measured in the child with abdominal pain. Acute pancreatitis in children has become a more commonly seen condition and the causes have varied. Laboratory and radiological studies play an important role in determining the diagnosis and prognosis. Family history is important in the diagnosis of idiopathic hereditary pancreatitis. Most acute episodes resolve with supportive care, but the mortality in acute pancreatitis is currently about 15% (Hadorn et al., 1980). Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography or an endoscopic retrograde pancreatogram may be necessary to investigate relapses of pancreatitis. Chronic pancreatitis can be a life-threatening condition requiring lifetime medical management.
...
PMID:Pancreatitis in children. 147 58

The frequency of acute and chronic pancreatitis is 3.3 and 2.1%, respectively, in 107,754 adult autopsies in Japan. Acute pancreatitis is highly associated with liver diseases of various etiologies such as subacute hepatitis (16.1%), fulminant hepatitis (13.5%), biliary cirrhosis (10.5%), cholangiocarcinoma (8.6%) and postnecrotic cirrhosis (7.1%). Chronic pancreatitis is also closely related to various liver diseases. It is suggested that the portal venous stasis in liver diseases may predispose the patients to develop pancreatitis regardless of the etiology of liver diseases.
...
PMID:Prevalence of pancreatitis in liver diseases of various etiologies: an analysis of 107,754 adult autopsies in Japan. 149 77

Non-neoplastic pancreatic disorders may cause pleuro-pulmonary signs. In acute pancreatitis respiratory disorders are very frequent and may cause simply an hypoxia or the adult respiratory distress syndrome (SDRA). There is no single mechanism: mechanical hypoventilation, alteration of the vessel walls and interstitial oedema, stasis of leucocytes, alterations in surfactant and intravascular coagulation may all contribute. These disturbances may be made by direct action of enzymes or by the intermediary of the activation of the kinine system, of complement activation and of coagulation mechanisms. In chronic pancreatitis the problem is to diagnose the cause of the pleural effusion which may often appear to be primary. The cause is suggested by a raised pleural amylase, type P. Although neoplastic pleural effusions may sometimes be rich in amylase it is of type S. The diagnosis rests on echos, computerised scans and retrograde cholangeopancreatography. The pathophysiology of these effusions is through the passage on the enzymes by the lymphatic route, by the oesophageal and aortic route or by a pancreatico-pleural fistula.
...
PMID:[Pleuro-pulmonary manifestation of pancreatic diseases]. 156 26

We evaluated the clinical accuracy of an automated turbidimetric assay for serum lipase determination in order to screen for acute pancreatic damage. Seventy patients with pancreatic and thirty with nonpancreatic digestive diseases were studied. Fifty-two healthy subjects were also studied as controls. Serum lipase concentrations were abnormally high in all patients with acute pancreatitis and in 3 (10%) in the group of 30 patients with nonpancreatic acute abdomen. In the 35 patients with chronic pancreatitis studied during clinical remission, serum lipase levels were abnormally high in 8 (23%), and abnormally low in 3 (9%). In the 9 patients with pancreatic cancer, 4 (44%) had abnormally elevated serum lipase values and 1 (11%) abnormally low. The results indicate that serum lipase determination is useful in the emergency diagnosis of acute pancreatic damage because of its high sensitivity and specificity. In patients with chronic pancreatitis and in patients with pancreatic carcinoma serum lipase determination is of limited value.
...
PMID:Serum lipase assay. A test of choice in acute pancreatitis. 158 55

A growing body of evidence suggests that oxygen radicals are generated in all forms of experimental pancreatitis at an early stage of disease. Moreover, first indirect observations assume that also in human acute recurrent and chronic pancreatitis oxygen free radicals are generated and add to the damages seen. The source of the enhanced production of oxygen radicals remains still unclear. Experimentally, the efficiency of scavenger treatment varies between three different models, whereby these differences depend more on the design of the experimental models than on the form of pancreatitis which was induced. Antioxidant treatment with radical scavengers should therefore interrupt these deleterious pathomechanisms or at least mitigate the damages normally seen. Most studies, however, pretreated the experimental animals before inducing acute pancreatitis, which does not mirror the clinical reality. Patients, however, are admitted after onset of the disease. Therefore, well-defined, controlled clinical studies are needed to validate the involvement of oxygen radicals in acute and chronic pancreatitis and the effect of scavenger treatment in patients with pancreatitis.
...
PMID:Role of oxygen radicals in experimental acute pancreatitis. 160 Oct 27

Oxygen-derived free radicals mediate an important step in the initiation of experimental acute pancreatitis. Thereby, it seems that these reactive oxygen metabolites are generated at an early stage of disease. The source of the enhanced production of oxygen radicals still remains unclear. Experimentally, the efficiency of scavenger treatment varied between different models, whereby these differences depended on the experimental model and not on the form of pancreatitis which was induced. Most studies pretreated the experimental animals before inducing acute pancreatitis. This does not mirror the clinical reality, since patients are admitted to the hospital after onset of the disease. It was shown in Cerulein pancreatitis, however, that scavenger treatment also mitigated the pancreatic tissue damages after induction of acute pancreatitis. Moreover, antioxidant treatment also attenuated the extrapancreatic complications, thus improving the final outcome of the disease. The first indirect observations also suggest that in human acute recurrent and chronic pancreatitis, oxygen free radicals are generated and add to the damages seen. Therefore, well-defined controlled clinical studies with patients suffering from acute pancreatitis are needed to validate the role of oxygen radicals in this disease.
...
PMID:The role of oxygen radicals in experimental acute pancreatitis. 160 26


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>