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Query: UMLS:C0020473 (hyperlipidemia)
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In a Chinese family with hereditary pancreatitis, two members are proven to have chronic pancreatitis. The propositus, a 31-year-old man, had epigastric pain since the age of 18. Multiple calcifications in the region of the pancreas were seen on plain film of the abdomen, ultrasonography, computed tomography, and endoscopic retrograde pancreatography. Pancreatolithotomy and side-to-side pancreatojejunostomy gave symptomatic improvement. His 60-year-old mother also had pancreatic calcifications in addition to diabetes. Known causes of secondary pancreatitis, such as hyperlipidemia, hyperparathyroidism, and amino aciduria, were ruled out in both patients.
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PMID:Hereditary pancreatitis in a Chinese family. 230 90

The use of total parenteral nutrition (TPN) in the treatment of 73 patients with acute severe pancreatitis was prospectively studied during a two year period. Patients were divided into three groups on the basis of calorie substrate used. Glucose and twice weekly lipid infusion (glucose based) were used in 60 per cent; 27 per cent required daily lipid infusion (lipid based), and 13 per cent received no lipid because of pre-existing hyperlipemia or thrombocytopenia (no lipid). Nutritional indices (albumin, transferrin and total lymphocyte count) were initially abnormal in more than 80 per cent of patients, and 50 per cent had three or more of Ranson's criteria. After TPN, 81 per cent had improved nutritional indices, and none had hypertriglyceridemia or aggravation of pancreatitis develop. Patients who received lipid based or no lipid had higher insulin requirements (p less than 0.01) than those receiving mainly glucose. Mortality was increased tenfold (2.5 versus 21.4 per cent, p less than 0.01) in patients who did not achieve positive nitrogen balance. We conclude that TPN, either lipid or glucose based, is a safe and effective therapy to reverse the malnutrition of acute pancreatitis and that failure to achieve positive nitrogen balance is associated with increased mortality.
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PMID:Total parenteral nutrition and alternate energy substrates in treatment of severe acute pancreatitis. 249 6

Acute pancreatitis often results in a hyperdynamic, consumptive state. Hallmarks of this condition are decreased peripheral resistance with increased cardiac output. Hemodynamic and cardiovascular changes are accompanied by metabolic alterations. Increased protein catabolism, increased ureagenesis, glucose intolerance, increased lipolysis, and reduced servoregulation are metabolic changes commonly seen in this syndrome. To preserve organ structure and function, biochemical processes must be metabolically supported. Substrate needs change as stress level increases. The per cent of total calories provided as protein must increase. Branched-chain-enriched amino acid solutions have been shown to improve nitrogen utilization in hypermetabolic patients and may therefore be beneficial for the patient with acute pancreatitis. Glucose utilization decreases and free fatty oxidation increases. A mixed fuel system that provides fat, protein, and glucose is suggested for these patients. IV fat has been shown to be a safe energy substrate for patients with pancreatitis in the absence of hyperlipidemia. Failure to use fat as an energy substrate in conjunction with TPN may result in hepatic steatosis and excess carbon dioxide production. The decision of whether to use the parenteral or enteral route to nutritionally support the patient with pancreatitis remains controversial. TPN may allow maintenance of pancreatic rest. The role of enteral feedings is less clear. However, it has been shown that the further down the alimentary tract the feeding is infused, the less pancreatic stimulation occurs. Therefore, it seems wise to support the patient with TPN during severe acute pancreatitis. Jejunal enteral feedings should be initiated as a transitional feeding when the acute inflammatory episode begins to subside.
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PMID:Nutritional support in acute pancreatitis. 250 54

Diabetic lipemia with and without acute pancreatitis in chronic alcoholism. A report of 4 cases. Diabetic lipemia was observed in 4 chronic alcoholic men after ingestion of high doses of alcohol and/or sugar-rich beverages, including one patient who was treated for insulin-dependent diabetes. None had a previous history of serum lipid disturbances. All had marked hyperglycemia, hyperosmolality and hypertriglyceridemia (mean: 60.8 mmol/l), 2 of undetermined type and 2 of type IV with eruptive xanthomas. Factitious hyponatremia was present in 3 cases, but true serum sodium was normal (138 mmol/l) or elevated (154, 156, 182 mmol/l) after correction. Three patients developed acute pancreatitis ascribed to high serum triglyceride levels and/or to alcohol ingestion. Serum and urine amylase activity was inhibited by hypertriglyceridemia. The diagnosis of pancreatitis was assessed twice by echography and computed tomographic scan, and once by tomographic scan and an elevation of the amylase on creatinine clearance ratio. It is likely that hypertriglyceridemia predisposed these patients to develop pancreatitis, alcoholism being a precipitating factor. We suggest that the diagnosis of acute pancreatitis should be systematically considered in any case of diabetic lipemia without true hyponatremia.
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PMID:[Diabetic hyperlipemia with or without acute pancreatitis in patients with chronic alcoholism. A study of 4 cases]. 274 Jun 61

The long term use of lipid-lowering drugs in the treatment of patients with hyperlipoproteinaemia is aimed at reducing plasma concentrations of known atherogenic lipoproteins with a favourable effect on lipid deposition in the arterial wall. A less common aim is to prevent the adverse sequelae of hyperchylomicronaemia in patients with severe hypertriglyceridaemia. The decision to begin drug therapy should be made only after the exclusion of secondary factors and after an adequate trial of diet has failed to produce acceptable concentrations of plasma lipids and lipoproteins. The bile acid sequestrants (cholestyramine and colestipol), nicotinic acid, fenofibrate and inhibitors of hydroxymethylglutaryl coenzyme A (HMG CoA) reductase (e.g. lovastatin or simvastatin) are the most effective drugs for use in patients with primary hypercholesterolaemia; these agents reduce plasma concentrations of total and LDL-cholesterol by 15 to 45%. For those patients with concurrent hypertriglyceridaemia, nicotinic acid, lovastatin or simvastatin, or fenofibrate are the preferred drugs for initial use; bile acid sequestrants frequently exacerbate hypertriglyceridaemia in these patients. Fibric acid derivatives (e.g. clofibrate, gemfibrozil, bezafibrate or fenofibrate) are all effective in the therapy of patients with type III hyperlipoproteinaemia, as is nicotinic acid and I have found lovastatin to be effective also. Gemfibrozil or nicotinic acid are the most effective agents to use in the treatment of patients with severe hypertriglyceridaemia who are at increased risk of abdominal pain and pancreatitis. Combined therapy with drugs which have different mechanisms of action can be effectively used in the treatment of patients with severe hypercholesterolaemia or combined hyperlipidaemia; for the former group, combinations which use bile acid sequestrants, HMG CoA reductase inhibitors and nicotinic acid are the most effective.
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PMID:An overview of lipid-lowering drugs. 307 24

Hypertriglyceridemia is a recognized complication of pregnancy. In patients with familial hypertriglyceridemia, the biochemical changes are greatly enhanced during pregnancy and may be associated with acute pancreatitis, a potentially fatal triad. Three patients were studied, in one of whom previously undiagnosed hyperlipidemia resulted in a fatal attack of fulminant acute pancreatitis. In the other two patients, this complication was avoided by close monitoring and restriction of dietary facts. A history of episodic abdominal cramps, often beginning in early childhood, or the presence of lipemic fasting plasma should alert the clinician to the presence of severe familial hypertriglyceridemia. Early diagnosis allows for the institution of relatively simple management strategies, which diminish the risk of pancreatitis.
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PMID:Hyperlipidemia, pregnancy and pancreatitis. 318 71

Effects of sustained ethanol intoxication and dietary fat content on pancreatic morphology were investigated in the rat model implanted with gastrostomy catheters, which permitted continuous intragastric infusion of ethanol plus liquid diet containing one of three levels of corn oil: 5% (low-fat), 25% (high-fat), and 35% (extra-high-fat) of total calories. After various durations of infusion ranging from 30 to 160 days, the pancreatic histology was examined. Mean blood alcohol levels achieved in the low, high, and extra-high fat diet groups were similarly high: 210 +/- 120, 224 +/- 122, and 289 +/- 110 mg/dl. The average weight gain of these ethanol-fed groups during the first 8 weeks of experiments was 15.4 +/- 1.9, 19.6 +/- 8.0, and 14.9 +/- 5.2 g/wk, respectively, and was not statistically different from that of pair-fed controls infused with isocaloric amount of dextrose and respective diet, nor from that of age-matched animals given the regular chow. None of control animals showed abnormal pancreatic morphologic features except occasional mild steatosis in those fed the extra-high-fat diet. With the low dietary intake of unsaturated fat, chronic ethanol intoxication produced only mild pancreatic pathology such as steatosis and interstitial edema. Administration of ethanol and the high-fat and extra-high-fat diets caused hypogranulation and apoptosis of acinar cells. Focal lesions of chronic pancreatitis were also observed in 20% or 30% of ethanol-fed animals given the high-fat or extra-high-fat diet. These lesions were characterized by fat necrosis, mononuclear cell infiltration, fibrosis, acinar atrophy, ductal dilatation, and intraductal mucious or proteinacious plugs. The incidence of focal acute pancreatitis was less (7-20%) but appeared increased with higher dietary fat content. Induction of either acute or chronic pancreatitis was not correlated with plasma levels of triglycerides or cholesterol. These results demonstrate potentiation by dietary unsaturated fat of ethanol-induced pancreatic injury. This model possesses many features analogous to those seen in alcoholic pancreatic injury in man. The hyperlipidemia does not appear to be an important pathogenetic factor for ethanol-induced pancreatitis produced in this model.
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PMID:Potentiation of ethanol-induced pancreatic injury by dietary fat. Induction of chronic pancreatitis by alcohol in rats. 335 54

A 23 year old pregnant woman presented in her third trimester with severe pancreatitis and hyperlipidemia. Initial investigations suggested that her pancreatitis was induced by profound hypertriglyceridemia, which was the result of an underlying Fredrickson's V type hyperlipoproteinemia exacerbated by pregnancy. Concern for the life of the fetus prompted a caesarean operation and then drainage procedure for pancreatitis. Plasma exchange, carried out to lower the levels of lipids and the pancreatic enzymes, improved the signs and symptoms of the patient. Plasma exchange may be of great use in the management of hyperlipidemic pancreatitis.
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PMID:Hyperlipidemia and pregnancy associated pancreatitis with reference to plasma exchange as a therapeutic intervention. 351 32

99mTc-diethyl-acetanilide-iminodiacetic acid (IDA) was compared with indocyanine green (ICG) as an indicator of hepatic blood flow (HBF). Twelve subjects (8 with cirrhosis, 2 with fatty liver, one with pancreatitis, and one with intestinal angina) were studied during hepatic vein catheterization. In 9 subjects the HBF measurements (indirect Fick-principle) were within 0.8-1.9 l/min, and no significant difference was observed between the values obtained by ICG and 99mTc-diethyl-IDA (mean 1.24 vs 1.26 l/min, P greater than 0.4). In 2 subjects with cirrhosis very high but almost identical values were found with the two indicators. In one subject ICG could not be measured in plasma because of hyperlipidaemia, but HBF was easily determined by 99mTc-diethyl-IDA. The results indicate that 99mTc-diethyl-IDA can be used as an indicator of HBF. This indicator is not superior to ICG in patients with decreased liver function, but offers advantages in that it can be used with small plasma samples and permits the determination of HBF in the presence of hyperlipidaemia.
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PMID:Hepatic blood flow determination. A comparison of 99mTc-diethyl-IDA and indocyanine green as hepatic blood flow indicators in man. 357 34

Acute recurrent pancreatitis in the absence of alcoholism and gallstones is a frustrating illness for both the patient and the physician. Over a 10 year period, 33 patients were operated on and found to have a duct of Wirsung entering the duodenum through the fibers of the sphincter of Oddi. Recurrent pancreatitis of sufficient intensity to require hospitalization had occurred an average of 4.2 times per patient, and each had experienced numerous episodes of abdominal pain of lesser severity. At least two attacks of pancreatitis that required hospitalization had occurred in all patients. All known causes of pancreatitis, including alcoholism, gallstones, hypercalcemia, hyperlipidemia, drug reactions, and pancreas divisum were excluded. Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography showed no ductal abnormalities. Twenty-eight of the patients had previously undergone cholecystectomy 8 months to 20 years before operation. A sphinteroplasty of the common bile duct and duct of Wirsung resulted in elimination of attacks of pancreatitis in all except two patients. Follow-up has been more than 5 years in 16 patients, more than 4 years in 10 patients, and more than 1 year in 5 patients. There have been no deaths. It appears that the entrance of the duct of Wirsung into the duodenum through a separate orifice through the fibers of the sphincter of Oddi causes recurrent acute pancreatitis. It seems likely that the problem is one of intermittent pancreatic duct obstruction. Normal pancreatic duct caliber is attributed to the intermittent nature of the obstruction. Enlargement of the orifice of the duct of Wirsung and division of the sphincter of Oddi relieved attacks of recurrent pancreatitis.
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PMID:Misplaced pancreatic duct orifice as a cause of recurrent acute pancreatitis. 381 90


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