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Query: UMLS:C0030305 (
pancreatitis
)
16,014
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Significant differences exist in the prevalence of most gastroenterological emergencies in tropical compared with temperate countries. Both ethnic and environmental (often clearly defined geographically) factors are relevant. The major oesophageal lesions which can present acutely in tropical countries are varices and carcinoma; bleeding and obstruction are important sequelae. Peptic ulcer disease (and its complications), often associated (not necessarily causally) with Helicobacter pylori infection, has marked geographical variations in incidence. Emergencies involving the small intestine are dominated by severe dehydration, and its sequelae, resulting from secretory diarrhoea, most notably cholera. However, enteritis necroticans ('pig bel' disease), paralytic ileus (sometimes caused by antiperistaltic agents) and obstruction (secondary to luminal helminths, volvulus and intussusception) are other important problems, especially in infants and children. Enteric fever is occasionally complicated by perforation and haemorrhage; the former (which is notoriously difficult to manage) is accompanied by significant mortality. Ileocaecal tuberculosis is a major cause of right iliac fossa pathology--sometimes associated with malabsorption; amoeboma is an important clinical differential diagnosis. The colon can be involved in invasive Entamoeba histolytica infection (which, like complicated enteric fever, is difficult to manage if the fulminant form, with perforation, ensues), shigellosis, volvulus and intussusception. Acute colonic dilatation occasionally follows Salmonella sp., Shigella sp., Campylobacter jejuni, Yersinia enterocolitica and rarely E. histolytica infections. Acute hepatocellular failure is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in the tropics and subtropics. It usually results from viral hepatitis (HBV, sometimes complicated by HDV, and HCV), but there is a long list of differential diagnoses. Hepatotoxicity resulting from herbs, chemotherapeutic agents or alcohol also occurs not infrequently. Chronic liver disease and its sequelae (often long-term results of viral hepatitis) are commonplace. Haematemesis and hepatocellular failure are usually very difficult to manage due to a lack of sophisticated support techniques in developing countries. Invasive hepatic amoebiasis usually responds well to medical management; however, spontaneous perforation can occur and the consequences of this are serious. Pyogenic liver abscess, although far less common than amoebic 'abscess', carries a bad prognosis whatever the method(s) of management. Hydatidosis and schistosomiasis also involve the liver, and helminthiases are important in the context of
biliary tract disease
. Gall stones are unusual in most tropical settings. Acute pancreatitis is overall unusual, but chronic calcific
pancreatitis
can present as an acute abdominal emergency.
...
PMID:Gastroenterological emergencies in the tropics. 176 26
Sixty-three patients with severe acute pancreatitis have been studied.
Pancreatitis
was associated with
biliary tract disease
in 23 patients (36.5%) and with alcoholism in 21 (33.3%). It occurred post-operatively in 9, and was associated with other conditions in 10. We evaluated the Ranson prognostic signs (RPS) with the appearance of complications. 36 patients (57.2%) had 3-4 RPS, 9 (30.2%) had 5-6 RPS and 8 (12.6%) had 7 or more RPS. Diagnostic laparotomy was performed in 11 patients (17.5%). 55 patients were operated one or more times due to failure of medical treatment and/or local and septic complications. The most frequent complications were pancreatic abscess (60.3%), sepsis (58.7%) and pulmonary insufficiency (52.4%). Renal failure occurred in 26 patients and 9 required dialysis. Of the patients with renal failure, 84.6% (22/26) had 4 or more RPS; 78.4% (29/37) of those with sepsis and 71.6% (27/38) of those with pancreatic abscess also had 4 or more RPS. The mean duration of hospitalization of survivors was 58 +/- 30 days. Overall mortality was 28.6%. We conclude that RPS are helpful to predict complications in patients with severe
pancreatitis
.
...
PMID:[Acute severe pancreatitis. Analysis of mortality and morbidity]. 184 70
Exploration of the small common bile duct can be technically difficult and is associated with a significant risk of ductal injury or late stricture, or both. Transduodenal common duct exploration after sphincteroplasty (TCDE/S) is an alternative method of duct exploration that avoids choledochotomy. Cholecystectomy followed by TCDE/S was performed upon 28 patients with nondilated ducts and suspected choledocholithiasis. Common duct stones were retrieved in 17 patients. Failure to retrieve stones in the remaining 11 patients was attributed to either false-positive results of cholangiography, forceful passage of stones into the duodenum during the initial insertion of a Fogarty catheter through the cystic duct or a false-negative finding at duct exploration. There was no perioperative mortality. Two patients had asymptomatic postoperative hyperamylasemia. One patient had postoperative
pancreatitis
, hyperbilirubinemia and cholangitis that resolved with antibiotic therapy by the eighth postoperative day. Other complications included wound infection, delayed gastric emptying, pneumonia and otitis media. The over-all morbidity rate was 28.6 per cent. Long term follow-up was obtained in all 28 patients. All patients in the follow-up group are free of recurrent
biliary tract disease
. TCDE/S appears to be a safe and effective method of exploring the nondilated common bile duct.
...
PMID:Transduodenal exploration of the common bile duct in patients with nondilated ducts. 186 71
Diseases presenting with dyspepsia fall into two general categories: organic and functional. Overall, most patients with dyspepsia have no underlying identifiable disease process. The diagnostic yield of organic causes is less in younger patients, and, conversely, serious organic lesions are common in elderly dyspeptic patients. The commonest organic causes of dyspepsia are peptic ulcer disease, gastroesophageal reflux,
biliary tract disease
, and gastric cancer. Symptoms and physical signs may help to differentiate these organic causes from functional dyspepsia but endoscopic or radiographic/ultrasound studies are usually necessary to ensure the appropriate diagnosis. Less common organic causes of dyspepsia not to be overlooked include drugs,
pancreatitis
, malabsorption syndromes, metabolic disorders, ischemic heart disease, and collagen vascular disorders.
...
PMID:Dyspepsia: organic causes and differential characteristics from functional dyspepsia. 189 24
Recent reports have described thickening and enhancement of the extrahepatic bile duct wall on CT scans obtained after administration of IV contrast material. We undertook this study to establish parameters for the normal thickness and enhancement of the bile duct wall on CT, and to develop a differential diagnosis for thickening of the duct wall. Routine CT examinations of 100 patients without biliary disease were evaluated prospectively. The common hepatic duct and common bile duct could be visualized in 66% and 82% of cases, respectively; the walls of these ducts could be separately discerned in 59% and 52%. The mean thickness of the duct wall was 1 mm, with a maximal thickness of 1.5 mm. Wall enhancement was similar to (51%), slightly greater than (44%), or markedly greater than (5%) the enhancement of adjacent pancreatic parenchyma. A review of records covering a 5-year period identified 52 patients in whom CT showed thickening of the bile duct wall (greater than or equal to 2 mm). These patients could be categorized by seven underlying diseases, and analysis of the CT scans revealed four general patterns of thickening. Focal, concentric wall thickening in the distal common bile duct was associated with
pancreatitis
, pancreatic cancer, and common bile duct stones; focal, eccentric thickening tended to occur with cholangiocarcinoma and sclerosing cholangitis. Diffuse, concentric thickening was seen with acute cholangitis; diffuse, eccentric thickening was associated with oriental cholangiohepatitis and sclerosing cholangitis. Thickening of greater than 5 mm was seen only with cholangiocarcinoma. Enhancement of the duct wall in these groups varied and was of no predictive value. In summary, the extrahepatic bile ducts can be visualized in the majority of patients, and the normal duct wall should be 1.5 mm or less in thickness. Contrast enhancement of the duct wall occurs in patients without
biliary tract disease
and alone is predictive not predictive of pathology.
Pancreatitis
, pancreatic cancer, common bile duct stones, cholangiocarcinoma, sclerosing cholangitis, acute cholangitis, and oriental cholangiohepatitis are associated with thickening of the duct wall.
...
PMID:CT of the extrahepatic bile ducts: wall thickness and contrast enhancement in normal and abnormal ducts. 210 31
The diagnostic and therapeutic role of ERCP in 42 patients ranging from 1 to 19 years of age is discussed. ERCP provided useful additional information in 15 patients with
biliary tract disease
, 15 patients with pancreatic disease, and 9 patients with abdominal pain. The appropriate duct was cannulated in 95% of cases. Mild
pancreatitis
occurred in two patients after ERCP. Endoscopic papillotomy was successful in five patients. ERCP plays an important part in the investigation of unexplained biliary tract and pancreatic disease. It rarely demonstrates abnormal pathology in patients with otherwise unexplained abdominal pain.
...
PMID:The role of ERCP in children and adolescents. 221 Feb 77
The increasing application of ultrasonography in
biliary tract disease
had led to more frequent recognition of an old disorder--"biliary sludge." Sludge is detected on ultrasound as low-amplitude echoes without acoustic shadowing. It layers in the most dependent part of the gallbladder and shifts with positioning. Particulate matter in bile, such as cholesterol monohydrate crystals, has been shown to be echogenic. Agglomeration of these crystals in biles with high mucus content accounts for the layering and the characteristic appearance of the movement of sludge with alteration in patient position. Within the gallbladder, the stability of the vesicular form of cholesterol and protein-lipid interactions are important determinants of cholesterol precipitation. In mixed and pigment gallstones, the equilibrium between ionized and unionized calcium and the hydrolysis of conjugated bilirubin are also important factors. Although the risk factors contributing to the formation of gallbladder sludge have not been critically examined, it is now known that in some instances sludge can produce biliary pain and can be associated with acalculous cholecystitis, recurrent
pancreatitis
and, ultimately, the formation of gallstones. A better appreciation of the pathogenesis of sludge formation can help in the understanding of the genesis of gallstones and also perhaps in understanding other documented but poorly understood biliary and pancreatic disorders.
...
PMID:Pathogenesis of biliary sludge. 221 Jun 50
Pancreatitis
is a common but rather poorly understood entity most often associated with alcohol abuse or
biliary tract disease
. Despite the availability of a variety of diagnostic tests and imaging techniques, the diagnosis of
pancreatitis
continues to be primarily a clinical one. Of major concern to the emergency physician is distinguishing
pancreatitis
from other, potentially lethal, causes of abdominal pain, and identifying those patients with severe
pancreatitis
who are at risk for a complicated course secondary to the remote systemic effects of the disease.
...
PMID:Pancreatitis. 222 92
Acute pancreatitis is a disease characterized by abdominal pain, low-grade fever, abdominal tenderness and rigidity, and moderate elevation of the white blood cell count. A widely used revised classification of
pancreatitis
is that proposed in 1984 at Marseille. It only distinguishes between acute and chronic pancreatitis. In 61 cases were 40 men and 21 women. The mean age in the total series was 52.5 years. The etiology of the acute condition was alcoholism in 32.8% and
biliary tract disease
in 23%. In 9.8% the acute pancreatitis is associated with alimentary tract diseases (adipositas, hyperlipidemia). The severity of acute pancreatitis is pathological anatomy determined by three stages. In pathogenesis the process of digestion is caused by activated pancreatic enzyme with acinar cell injury. The acinar cell is normally protected from the action of its own enzymes by elaborate intracellular compartmentation of enzymes. Acute pancreatitis is triggered by pancreatic phospholipase A leading to necrosis of lipolytically active fat cells with release of membrane-toxic fatty acids with following destruction of adjacent tissue. Fat necrosis initiates an acute inflammatory reaction with immigration of granulocytes and liberation of kinins, which activate pancreatic enzyme. Pancreatic enzymes are similar to lysosomal enzymes with regard to substrate specificity. Activation will be also triggered by lysosomal enzymes of necrotic acinar cells.
...
PMID:[Acute pancreatitis--etiology, pathological anatomy and pathogenesis]. 226 Mar 61
Two hundred consecutive patients with gallstone
pancreatitis
were treated during a 6-year period; 92 patients were operated on after the acute attack subsided but during the same admission (group 1), 102 patients were discharged after recovery and scheduled for elective surgery (group 2), and the conditions of 6 patients deteriorated and they underwent emergency operation (group 3). All patients in group 3 had hemorrhagic
pancreatitis
. Mortalities for groups 1, 2, and 3 were 0%, 0%, and 50%, respectively. Although the outcome of patients in groups 1 and 2 was similar, only 60 of 102 patients in group 2 had their treatment completed. Furthermore, 29 (44%) of 65 patients who were followed up in group 2 suffered recurrent
pancreatitis
or
biliary tract disease
before elective surgery. The timing of surgery in patients whose conditions improve is not critical; however, patients whose conditions deteriorate after admission have severe disease with high morbidity and mortality.
...
PMID:Gallstone pancreatitis. The question of time. 236 10
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