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Query: UMLS:C0030305 (pancreatitis)
16,014 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Choledochal cyst is a well-recognised entity, presenting primarily in infants and young children. Where symptoms are delayed until adulthood, associated hepatobiliary pathology may complicate the presentation. These problems may be aggravated by previous treatment with bypass surgery rather than resection. We report seven cases from our recent experience presenting with complications in adulthood. These included cholangitis, hepatic abscess, pancreatitis and malignancy within the cyst. Two patients presented during pregnancy. These complications and their implications for management are discussed.
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PMID:Complications of choledochal cysts in adulthood. 224 Oct 66

Cutting-needle biopsy under ultrasonic guidance was performed in 47 patients with suspected pancreatic carcinoma. The final diagnosis as revealed by autopsy, surgery, or radiologic/clinical follow-up was pancreatic malignancy in 39 patients and benign disease in eight. A correct diagnosis with the aid of biopsy findings was obtained in 44 of the 47 patients (94%). In three patients with carcinoma of the pancreas, the correct diagnosis was not obtained with use of results from the first biopsy. In two of these three patients, simultaneous biopsy of a liver metastasis revealed the presence of a malignant tumor growth. After the biopsy, two patients had a vasovagal reaction, and two experienced mild pain. No case of biopsy-induced pancreatitis occurred, although in one patient a transient rise in the serum amylase level was seen. The present results show that cut biopsy of the pancreas is a useful, reliable, and nontraumatic method in the diagnosis of pancreatic malignancy.
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PMID:Biopsy of the pancreas with a biopsy gun. 238 13

The main case control studies and over 30 cohort studies of pancreatic cancer, performed during the period 1973-1988 are reviewed. For each type of risk factor a table is given which summarizes the conclusions of the various studies. The multifactorial etiology of this cancer is reflected by the number of different exposures studied. In our opinion, the effects of tobacco are indisputable even though they have not been systematically described in all studies. Cigarette smoking is associated with two-fold increase in risk. The effect of different forms of smoking, such as filter utilization, pipe, colour of tobacco, etc. on the risk are unclear. The effect of alcohol is less important although this needs to be confirmed. Tobacco use was not controlled in many studies where a positive results was obtained for alcohol. The same confounding effect has perhaps biased the results of several studies carried out for coffee drinkers. While not definitively confirmed, the elevated risk associated with coffee drinking appears to be plausible. Results on other dietary factors have not been widely reported. However, a positive association has been found for consumption of meat and fat and a negative one for vegetables and fruits. In some cases, these results are amplified by a dose-response effect. Further nutritional studies are required in order to resolve this question. Previous medical conditions have also been considered, in particular diseases of the pancreas, i.e. diabetes mellitus and pancreatitis. The results are not consistent, as causes and effects are not easy to detect. However, positive results for diabetes mellitus are more convincing than those for other conditions. Potential effects of work-related exposure have been analysed by many researchers although no firm conclusions can be drawn upon review of those results. Among the suspected risks, one has to consider the chemical industry and industrial exposure in oil refinery, aluminium reduction, and coke transformation. Occupations involving contact with dyes, paint and thinners could also be in the risk group.
Bull Cancer 1990
PMID:[Risk factors of cancer of the pancreas from analytic epidemiologic studies]. 218 May 1

The importance of ultrasound in the diagnosis of primary pancreatic adenocarcinoma is due to the wide use of ultrasound as a first diagnostic modality in the case of abdominal problems, immediately after the physical examination. The results of the ultrasound examination allow the physician to choose the best way to explore the pancreas further (CT, pancreatography, angiography, MRI). The technical quality of the ultrasound examination is mandatory and the radiologist must be able to recognize its insufficiencies. The pancreatic adenocarcinoma is difficult to see with ultrasound: infiltration, ill-defined borders and echopattern; the lymph node or metastatic involvement is frequent and remains a good diagnostic sign. Many pitfalls can be attributed to this technique; the variations of the normal anatomy, the diversity and variable appearance of pancreatic lesions and the association with pancreatitis. The US-guided puncture represents a way to limit the use of diagnostic exploratory laparotomy.
Bull Cancer 1990
PMID:[Contribution of echography to the diagnosis of cancer of the exocrine pancreas. Pitfalls and limits. Results of guided biopsy]. 218 45

This article suggests that for the concept of feedback regulation of the pancreas the application of animal data to humans has obvious limitations. The introduction of the synthetic protease inhibitor camostate (FOY 305) offered the possibility of designing studies in animals and man using the same compound as tool thus allowing reliable comparisons between the different experiments. These experiments revealed that cholecystokinin (CCK) has a dominant role in rats but it has no proven significance for feedback regulation in humans. The existence of such species differences should be kept in mind in studies dealing with pancreatic secretion, growth, pancreatitis, cancer, or related questions.
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PMID:A critical appraisal of studies of the pancreas. Animal models used in pancreas research: studies on feedback regulations of the pancreas. 220 62

Pancreaticopleural fistula is an uncommon clinical condition. Its presentation is often confusing because of the paucity of clues suggestive of pancreatic disease and the preponderance of pulmonary symptoms and signs. Most patients are alcoholics but only one-half will have a clinical history of previous pancreatitis. Pleural effusions are large, recurrent, and highly exudative in nature. Many patients go through extensive pulmonary evaluation before the pancreas is identified as the site of primary pathology. An elevated serum amylase may be the first clue to the diagnosis. However, the key to the diagnosis is a dramatically elevated pleural fluid amylase. Effusions in association with acute pancreatitis, esophageal perforation, and thoracic malignancy are important to consider in the differential diagnosis of an elevated pleural fluid amylase but are usually easy to exclude. Computed tomography is excellent in defining pancreatic abnormalities and should be the first abdominal imaging study in suspected cases. Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) is used as a diagnostic tool only in confusing cases. Although no systematic study evaluates medical versus surgical therapy, we recommend an initial 2 to 4-week trial of medical therapy, including allowance of no oral intake, total parenteral nutrition, chest tube thoracostomy, and possibly a regimen of somatostatin or its analogs. The major complication in these patients is superinfection, which results in significant morbidity and mortality. Failure of medical therapy should be considered failure of pleural effusion(s) to clear, recurrence after reinstatement of oral intake, or superinfection. For those patients who fail to benefit from medical therapy, surgery is indicated.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Pancreaticopleural fistula. Report of 7 patients and review of the literature. 223 31

The relation between various aspects of medical history, selected indicator foods and the risk of pancreatic cancer was analyzed in a hospital-based case-control study conducted in Northern Italy on 247 patients with cancer of the pancreas, and 1,089 controls in hospitals for acute, nonneoplastic or digestive conditions. There was a significant association with history of pancreatitis (relative risk, RR 3.2, 95% confidence interval = 1.3-7.9), which was however reduced when the condition was first diagnosed at least 5 years previously. The point estimates were slightly, but not significantly, above unity for diabetes (RR = 1.5), gastrectomy (RR = 1.1) and cholelithiasis (RR = 1.3), and no association was found with liver disease or drug allergy. In relation to diet, there was some tendency for the risk to decrease with more frequent fruit consumption, but the results were largely inconsistent in relation to various indicators of meat, animal protein or fat intake. Although no important associations were found in this study with various aspects of medical history or diet indicators and pancreatic cancer risk, on account of the size of the dataset and the statistical power, this study contributes usefully to the debate on a common cancer whose causes are still largely undefined.
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PMID:Medical history, diet and pancreatic cancer. 224 64

Tumour-associated trypsin inhibitor (TATI) is a 6 kDa peptide, which is synthesized at low concentrations by several tumours and cell lines. Very high concentrations of TATI occur in mucinous ovarian tumours. Elevated levels of TATI occur in serum and urine in connection with most types of cancer at advanced stages. In mucinous ovarian cancer up to 85% of all cases have elevated serum levels. Because high levels also occur in early mucinous ovarian cancer TATI appears to be the marker of choice for this tumour. Elevated levels may also occur in nonmalignant disease, especially in patients with severe infections, tissue destruction and pancreatitis. Production of TATI in tumours is associated with expression of two new tumour-associated trypsin(ogen) (TAT) isoenzymes, TAT-1 and -2, TAT-2 being the major form. These enzymes are immunologically similar to trypsinogen-1 and -2, respectively. They activate prourokinase and may therefore trigger the tumour-associated protease cascade contributing to the invasiveness of malignant tumours.
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PMID:Tumour-associated trypsin inhibitor and tumour-associated trypsin. 224 88

Focal lesions of the pancreas or its surroundings comprise a variety of morphologic substrates that do not always require treatment. Cysts and neoplasms are the two important groups. Postpancreatic cysts are increasingly and successfully treated by endoscopy and interventions guided by ultrasound. They have to be distinguished from cystic neoplasms or intracavitary hemorrhage which have to be approached by primary surgery. Pancreatic malignancies do not necessarily invite to a fatalistic attitude. Only ductal pancreatic cancer carries a still poor prognosis although we have achieved a 20% 5 year survival rate if resection without residual tumor was possible. If lymph nodes were not involved 43% of patients survived for 5 years. Periampullary carcinoma and the other pancreatic neoplasms carry a much better prognosis. The search for focal pancreatic lesions must be particularly thorough in patients presenting with diabetes of sudden onset, persistent hyperamylasemia and in some cases with an acute, possibly severe pancreatitis without apparent cause and an age of over 40 years.
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PMID:[Surgical aspects of focal pancreatic lesions]. 225 60

Computed tomography (CT) displays fluid collections in patients with acute pancreatitis as well defined intra- or extrapancreatic homogeneous areas with low attenuation numbers. We followed, prospectively, the clinical courses of 128 patients who had CT during an episode of acute pancreatitis, to determine the natural history and clinical significance of any fluid collections that developed. Fluid collections were found in 48 (37%) of the 128 patients with pancreatitis. Thirty-eight developed in the 86 (44%) patients with alcoholic pancreatitis, five in the 33 (15%) with biliary pancreatitis and five in the nine (55%) with other causes of pancreatitis (excluding chronic pancreatitis, trauma, or malignancy). On clinical follow-up of the 48 patients with fluid collections, 21 patients required operation; two died before an operation was done and 25 did not require operation. Operations were done to treat pseudocysts (14), abscess (5), and necrosis (3). One patient had an operation for a pseudocyst and an abscess. All 14 patients requiring operation for pseudocyst had collections greater than 7 cm and 13 of these patients had alcoholic pancreatitis. Of the 25 patients not requiring operation, five were lost to follow-up, and 19 of the 20 who had spontaneous resolution of their fluid collection(s) had collections less than 6 cm in diameter. The eight patients who required operative pancreatic debridement for abscess or necrosis had multiple small fluid collections. In summary, fluid collections were found in one-third of patients with acute pancreatitis and were often associated with the development of local complications.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The clinical significance of fluid collections in acute pancreatitis. 226 9


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