Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0020538 (hypertension)
170,190 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

This paper presents a 59-year-old man who was admitted to our hospital because of abdominal pains in 1973. He had pancreatic calcification and showed high levels of serum amylase, Ca, and PTH. He was diagnosed as primary hyperparathyroidism with chronic pancreatitis. After excision of an ectopic parathyroid adenoma, serum Ca levels were decreased and normalized by dihydrotachysterol p.o. At the same time his symptoms disappeared. The exocrine and endocrine pancreatic functions, however, decreased gradually. Diabetes mellitus appeared in 1975 and he required insulin injection since 1983. In spite of the treatment, his diabetic control was poor. Seventeen years later in 1992, he showed hypertension and edema (nephrotic syndrome). Because of renal failure, he underwent hemodialysis and passed away due to myocardial infarction in 1993. Autopsy findings showed existence of diabetic nephropathy as the cause of renal failure. Clinical course of this patient suggests that severe complications occur even in pancreatic diabetes and that we have to control diabetes strictly in pancreatic diabetes as well as in primary diabetes.
...
PMID:[An autopsy case of renal failure as its cause of death in a patient with primary hyperparathyroidism associated with chronic pancreatitis]. 894 Aug 1

The paper presents some experience with surgical treatment of 183 patients with complicated forms of chronic pancreatitis. The type of a surgical intervention depended on the pattern of pancreatic morphological changes. Operations of internal drainage of the pancreas in 103 patients with ductal hypertension provide the largest percentage (92.4%) of good and satisfactory results. Resectional methods of surgical treatment for chronic pancreatitis (n = 36) without signs of intraductal hypertension and with the prevalence of predominant lesions in some portions of the gland yield 80% good and satisfactory results. The incidence of postoperative complications following pancreatic resections is higher than those after drainages (16.2 versus 11.6%). The paper gives a concept of combined operations on the pancreas and bile ducts in chronic pancreatitis complicated by stricture of the distal common bile duct, revealed in 24.4% of cases.
...
PMID:[Basic principles of surgical policy in complicated chronic pancreatitis]. 937 35

Intraductal and intraparenchymal hypertension represent the rationale for surgical drainage procedures in the treatment of chronic pancreatitis. "Simple" drainage procedures such as longitudinal pancreaticojejunostomy according to Partington-Rochelle have to be distinguished from "extended" drainage operations, e.g. the combination of longitudinal pancreaticojejunostomy with limited local excision of the pancreatic head. This "extended" drainage procedure according to Frey is just as effective as resective procedures in terms of persistent pain relief and definitive management of pancreatitis-associated complications of adjacent organs, i.e. distal common bile duct and duodenal stenosis. This operation also addresses an inflammatory mass in the pancreatic head. In contrast to "simple" drainage procedures the Frey operation allows reliable exclusion of pancreatic carcinoma. With low perioperative morbidity and zero mortality the Frey procedure significantly improves quality of life and leads to social and occupational rehabilitation.
...
PMID:[Drainage operation as therapeutic principle of surgical organ saving treatment of chronic pancreatitis]. 941 Jun 73

Abdominal pain, excruciating and recurrent, is the dominant feature of chronic pancreatitis that initially brings most of the patients to the physician's attention. The pathogenesis of pancreatic pain is often multifactorial and explains why not all patients respond to the same mode of therapy. Increased intraductal pressure as a result of ductal stricture and/or calculi is the most frequent cause for pain in the large majority of patients with large duct disease. Interstitial hypertension, ongoing pancreatic ischemia, neuronal inflammation, and extra pancreatic complications may be the sole or additional factors in the pathogenesis of pain. The management of pain is difficult and requires a team approach. Internist, gastroenterologist, radiologist, surgeon, and a psychiatrist may have to work together to achieve maximum success. Drug and alcohol dependency needs vigorous management by a psychiatrist. Supportive therapy with a low-fat diet and antioxidant supplementation are helpful. When analgesic therapy fails, surgery may have to be considered much before a narcotic dependency develops. If at all of use, oral pancreatic enzyme therapy is suitable only in a selected group of patients--women with idiopathic pancreatitis. Endoscopic papillotomy, stent placement, and stone removal, although becoming popular, are under trial only and appear to be suitable in those with obstructive disease mostly localized to the head of the pancreas without much proximal disease. A patient with a dilated duct system is a good candidate for Puestow's pancreatico-jejunal anastamosis, which appears to be the best surgical procedure. Those with small duct diseases are difficult to be managed. Resective procedures and celiac ganglion blocking are suggested but not of much help.
...
PMID:Chronic pancreatitis: pathogenesis and management of pain. 975 70

Pseudocyst of the pancreas is sometimes difficult to distinguish from mucinous cystic neoplasm of the pancreas. A 37-year-old asymptomatic Japanese man was diagnosed with hypertension. He had a 20-years history of habitual drinking of alcohol, but no history of pancreatitis or abdominal trauma. During examinations to ascertain the cause of hypertension, ultrasonography and computed tomography incidentally demonstrated a huge cyst in the head of the pancreas. Laboratory data were within normal limits, including serum levels of amylase, carcinoembryonic antigen, and carbohydrate antigen 19-9. Imaging studies showed a huge unilocular cyst, measuring 7 cm, in the head-to-body of the pancreas, and two small unilocular cysts, measuring 1.4 and 1.5 cm, in the tail and head of the pancreas, respectively. A mural nodule was suspected in the largest cyst. Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography demonstrated communication of the main pancreatic duct with the two small cysts in the head and tail of the pancreas but not with the huge cyst. There were no ductal changes suggesting chronic pancreatitis. Laparotomy was performed under the tentative diagnosis of potentially malignant mucinous cystic neoplasms of the pancreas. However, inflammatory adhesion was dense around the pancreas and the mural nodule suspected preoperatively was found to be sludge aggregates in a pseudocyst. The diagnosis of an intraoperative frozen section of the cyst wall was pseudocyst of the pancreas. Cystojejunostomy was performed. We report this case because the preoperative diagnosis was mucinous cystic neoplasm of the pancreas, but the diagnosis changed with careful intraoperative examinations, to pseudocyst of the pancreas. We discuss the differential diagnosis of the two conditions.
...
PMID:Chronic asymptomatic pseudocyst with sludge aggregates masquerading as mucinous cystic neoplasm of the pancreas. 977 48

Recently, we found a serum acylcarnitine (ACR) deficiency in Japanese patients with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS). To clarify whether this ACR abnormality is a characteristic of CFS or not, we also studied the levels of serum carnitine in Swedish subjects. Both serum ACR and free carnitine (FCR) levels in normal healthy subjects were quite different between Japanese (n=131) and Swedish people (n=46) (p<0.001). However, it is confirmed that Swedish patients with CFS (n=57) also had serum ACR deficiency (p<0.001). When we studied the levels of serum ACR and FCR in Japanese patients with various kinds of diseases (CFS, hematological malignancies, chronic pancreatitis, hypertension, diabetes mellitus, chronic hepatitis type C, psychiatric diseases), a significant decrease in the levels of serum ACR was only found in patients with CFS and chronic hepatitis type C (p<0.001). Therefore, we concluded that ACR deficiency in serum might be a characteristic abnormality in only certain types of diseases.
...
PMID:Low levels of serum acylcarnitine in chronic fatigue syndrome and chronic hepatitis type C, but not seen in other diseases. 985 42

The experience of surgical treatment of 517 patients with complicated forms of chronic pancreatitis (CP) was analyzed. In patients with the fibrotic CP without ductal hypertension, while involvement in the process of neighboring organs, the operations were conducted for the biliary and duodenal impassability elimination. The drainage operations of various types are indicated in fibrotic CP with ductal hypertension. In patients with fibrotic-degenerative CP the resectional methods were applied. Postoperative mortality have constituted 1.9%. Good and fair result of treatment in the late follow-up period was achieved in 75.7% of patients due to application of the proposed differentiative tactics.
...
PMID:[The diagnosis and surgical treatment of complicated forms of chronic pancreatitis]. 1005 Mar 72

In conclusion, surgical therapy in patients with chronic pancreatitis may be characterized as follows: 1. Independently, several investigators have found intraductal and intraparenchymatous hypertension in patients with chronic pancreatitis. Decompression of the ductal system as the main principle of surgical therapy achieves clinical pain relief in most patients with chronic pancreatitis. The precondition is a consequent drainage of the main pancreatic duct and tributary ducts of second and third order up to the prepapillary region. The presence of an inflammatory tumor in the head of the pancreas or ductal abnormalities in the prepapillary region or a pancreas divisum requires performance of an extended drainage operation (LPJ-LPHE) to achieve pain relief and an improved quality of life. An extended drainage operation effectively manages complications arising from adjacent organs, such as distal common bile duct stenosis, segmental duodenal stenosis, and internal pancreatic fistulas. The extent of decompression has to be tailored to the anatomic and morphologic situation of the patient. 2. In patients with chronic pancreatitis, the main pancreatic duct is usually dilated. A small duct (3-5 mm) is only small for the surgeon. For the sclerosing entity of chronic pancreatitis with a truly small duct, that is, less than 3 mm in diameter ("small duct disease"), a longitudinal V-shaped excision of the ventral pancreas, as opposed to left resection, provides a new perspective for a sufficient drainage. 3. In the presence of segmental portal hypertension, a simple or extended drainage operation does not result in a normalization of the portal venous blood flow; however, how often relevant upper gastrointestinal hemorrhage develops from segmental portal hypertension is unclear. Therefore, the clinical relevance of this special problem needs further evaluation. 4. Postoperative morbidity of LPJ-LPHE is significantly lower in comparison to resectional procedures, such as PD, PPPD, and DPRHP. A lower perioperative mortality rate is not justified anymore as a relevant criterion in favor of drainage procedures because resectional procedures are burdened by a minimal or no mortality in experienced centers; however, PD and PPPD are greatly hampered by a significantly decreased postoperative global quality of life as opposed to the LPJ-LPHE. This is reflected by a significantly lower rate of social and professional rehabilitation. 5. The incidence of exocrine and endocrine organ dysfunction is lower after LPJ-LPHE compared with PD or PPPD, but not compared with DPRHP. Preservation of the gastroduodenal passage and the continuity of the bile duct with its associated feedback mechanisms of exocrine pancreatic secretion and glucose metabolism seem to be responsible for this phenomenon. 6. An early surgical or endoscopic interventional drainage of the hypertensive pancreatic duct system possibly offers the chance to favorably manipulate the natural course of chronic pancreatitis with regard to a delayed onset of exocrine or endocrine insufficiency. 7. Late mortality reflects continued alcohol abuse rather than the effect of an operative procedure.
...
PMID:Surgical treatment of chronic pancreatitis and quality of life after operation. 1047 Mar 35

We report a case of renal artery stenosis most probably secondary to chronic pancreatitis. The patient had a traumatic pancreatic fistula. This was followed by numerous attacks of pancreatitis in the following years. At a relatively young age, he developed hypertension. Examinations revealed a right renal artery stenosis which was successfully treated by a percutaneous angioplasty. This rare complication should be kept in mind as a possible complication of pancreatitis.
...
PMID:A case of renal artery stenosis secondary to chronic pancreatitis. 1049 90

For the last 25 years incidence of chronic pancreatitis (CP) has risen 18 times. The treatment of CP is aimed at relief of pain syndrome, suppression of pancreatic secretion, control of inflammation, reduction of hypertension in the ducts, elimination of self-activation of the enzymes and autolytic processes in the pancreas as well as intoxication, dehydration, electrolytic disorders.
...
PMID:[Treatment of chronic pancreatitis]. 1056 Feb 55


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