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

The pathogenesis of acute pancreatitis is based on the following principles: 1. Biliary. In biliary pancreatitis there is a causal relationship between the induction of acute pancreatitis and the migration of gallstones. The basic pathomechanism seems to be a combination of an increase in permeability and pressure in the ductal system. 2. Intraacinar. Caerulein-pancreatitis is a well established experimental model which reflects the intracellular/interstitial type of activation. Basolateral secretion of pancreatic enzymes into the interstitial space represents the initial event. Intracellular activation of trypsin by the fusion of zymogen-granules and lysosomes has been advocated as an alternative mechanism. 3. Alcohol. The acute alcohol pancreatitis comprises a combined pathogenesis. Obstruction and reflux as well as the cytotoxic effect of alcohol seem to be the main principles. 4. Disturbance of pancreatic microcirculation. Ischemia of the pancreas seems to play a key role in the transition from pancreatic edema to necrosis. Improvement of capillary perfusion by isovolemic hemodilution with dextran 60 has been shown to be an efficient therapeutic tool.
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PMID:[Etiology and pathogenesis of acute pancreatitis]. 152 49

Though laparoscopic cholecystectomy has become widespread, questions remain as to its success rate, its role in acute cholecystitis, the role of cholangiography, and whether laser use is necessary. To attempt to answer these questions, the first 100 patients undergoing laparoscopic cholecystectomy at Emory University using electrosurgical diathermy were reviewed. Patients underwent cholecystectomy for biliary colic (87), gallstone pancreatitis (1), and acute cholecystitis (12). The average length of hospital stay was 29 hours (range: 12 hours to 5 days). Laparoscopic cholecystectomy was not possible in 7 patients because of gangrenous cholecystitis (2), adhesions from previous surgery (2), equipment failure (2), and choledochoduodenal fistula found at surgery (1). Two patients developed bile leaks from accessory bile ducts that healed spontaneously. There were no other complications. The average time required to complete the laparoscopic cholecystectomy was 115 minutes (range: 45 to 238 minutes) and was not significantly different in those patients undergoing intraoperative cholangiography (117 minutes) versus those without (109 minutes). Common duct stones were uncommon in this series. Thirty-three patients underwent intraoperative cholangiogram. One patient was found to have a common duct stone, which was pushed into the duodenum using a Fogarty catheter (American Edwards Laboratories; Anasco, Puerto Rico) inserted through the cystic duct at the time of laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Twelve patients with acute cholecystitis underwent an attempt at laparoscopic cholecystectomy that was successful in nine. These procedures were difficult and lengthy (mean of 143 minutes). Causes for failure were gangrenous cholecystitis (2) and equipment failure (1). In conclusion, laparoscopic cholecystectomy can be performed with a high success rate (93%) and low morbidity (2%). No complications seemed attributable to electrosurgical dissection.
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PMID:Electrosurgical laparoscopic cholecystectomy. 153 95

Laparoscopic laser cholecystectomy is becoming increasingly popular in the surgical community for the treatment of gallbladder disease. Physicians will need to familiarize themselves with the imaging consequences of this new therapy. Described below is a case report of a woman in whom calculi were incidentally found within the pelvis on a plain radiograph of the abdomen after she presented to the hospital with pancreatitis. Initial confusion regarding the etiology of these calculi was solved after it was discovered that the patient had proven gallstones and a recent laparoscopic procedure. In the appropriate clinical setting, gallstones should be added to the differential consideration of intrapelvic calcifications.
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PMID:Intrapelvic calculi demonstrated in a patient after laparoscopic laser cholecystectomy: a case report. 153 50

Laparoscopic removal is rapidly becoming the preferred method of cholecystectomy; however, choledocholithiasis cannot usually be managed with a laparoscopic approach. Combined endoscopic sphincterotomy and laparoscopic cholecystectomy is a potential solution to this problem. To determine the feasibility of this combined procedure we studied 41 patients who had both endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) and laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Indications for ERCP included jaundice, gallstone pancreatitis, dilated ducts on sonography, elevated liver enzymes, or stones seen on operative cholangiography. Twenty-eight patients had ERCP preoperatively. Nine patients had common duct stones; these were successfully removed from eight patients after sphincterotomy. Two patients had unexpected strictures requiring a change in surgical approach. Thirteen patients had ERCP postoperatively. Eight of those patients had common duct stones, and all were successfully removed following endoscopic sphincterotomy. Three patients had postoperative strictures, one of which was treated by endoscopic stent placement. No complications as a result of ERCP or sphincterotomy were encountered. ERCP and endoscopic sphincterotomy can be safely performed both preoperatively and as early as 1 day postoperatively. If indicators of choledocholithiasis are present, preoperative ERCP is preferred, because stone removal occasionally is unsuccessful, and cholangiographic findings may change the operative approach. Postoperative ERCP can define and, in some instances, treat biliary tract injuries resulting from laparoscopic cholecystectomy.
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PMID:Role of ERCP and therapeutic biliary endoscopy in association with laparoscopic cholecystectomy. 848 Nov 83

Computed tomography (CT) was performed on 88 patients before and after extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy (ESWL) of gallstones to find the effects of ESWL on the gallbladder and surrounding liver tissue. Post-ESWL scans demonstrated a thickening of the gallbladder wall in 25 (28.4%) cases. In one patient an intrahepatic bilioma beside the gallbladder was seen 3 days after ESWL treatment. Hematoma of the gallbladder wall or the adjacent liver tissue was not seen, and neither a hydrops nor biliary-induced pancreatitis was observed. The authors conclude that while some patients undergoing ESWL will show some posttreatment abnormality on CT scans, the procedure is associated with a low frequency of serious gallbladder and liver trauma.
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PMID:Computed tomography after ESWL of gallbladder calculi. 155 12

420 patients were referred to our center for gallstone lithotripsy. 97 patients (23%) with radiolucent gallbladder stones (total diameter less than or equal to 3 cm) and intact gallbladder function were found suitable for extracorporal shock-wave lithotripsy. Disintegration of gallbladder stones was achieved in 92 of the 97 patients (95%). Chenodeoxycholic acid and ursodeoxycholic acid were used as adjuvant litholytic therapy. The therapeutic results were evaluated cumulatively in 90 patients after a follow-up of 10 months. 80% of patients with solitary stones (less than or equal to 20 mm in diameter (n = 46) had a stone-free gallbladder, whereas patients with solitary stones greater than 2 cm, less than or equal to 3 cm in diameter (n = 20) and multiple stones (n = 22) became stone-free in only 28% (p less than 0.01). During the observation period 21 patients (23%) experienced biliary colics, 2 (2%) mild pancreatitis, 2 (2%) showed fragment impaction in the common bile duct, and 17 (19%) displayed transient microscopic hematuria. Our results confirm previous studies showing that solitary stones sized up to 2 cm in diameter represent the best suited subgroup for extracorporeal shock-wave lithotripsy.
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PMID:[Combination therapy of gallbladder stones using extracorporeal shock waves and bile acids: results in relation to stone diameter and stone number]. 155 25

From April 1988 until November 1990, 83 patients with symptomatic gallbladder stones were treated in the University Hospital "Dijkzigt" Rotterdam with extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy (ESWL) followed by oral administration of bile acids (urso- and chenodeoxycholic acid). According to our inclusion criteria, patients with up to 10 stones without any limit to the size of the stone(s) were accepted for treatment. On average, these patients underwent two sessions of ESWL with an electromagnetic lithotriptor (Lithostar and Lithostar Plus, Siemens AG, Erlangen, Germany). Fragmentation of stones was achieved in 70/83 (84% patients). The best results were achieved in patients with a solitary gallstone (50% of these patients were stone-free 12 months after ESWL). Four percent of the patients with two to three stones, and 12% of the patients with four to 10 stones were free of stones 12 months after ESWL. Twenty-eight (34%) patients suffered from biliary colics after ESWL, and three patients (3.5%) developed pancreatitis. The administration of oral bile acids was complicated by transient diarrhoea in 15 (18%) patients. ESWL followed by oral bile acid therapy is a relatively effective and safe therapy for a highly select population of patients with gallbladder stones, which can be performed on an outpatient basis. Although the results for multiple stones were poor, the usage of wide inclusion criteria (up to 10 stones of any size) did not affect the success rate of ESWL for multiple stones.
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PMID:Electromagnetic shock wave lithotripsy of gallbladder stones: a wide range of inclusion criteria. 155 38

In a small percentage of patients with acute pancreatitis, recurrent attacks of pain and hyperamylasaemia occur when feeding is commenced. Recurrences of this type may occur because the pancreas is still swollen and inflamed, and indicate the need for a longer period of "pancreatic rest" before food is introduced. Alternatively, they may reflect the presence of "mechanical" factors leading to the recurrent pancreatitis, such as a gallstone in the common bile duct, a pseudocyst of the pancreas, or pancreatic duct obstruction. Successful resolution of the pancreatitis may require treatment of underlying causative factors. A stone in the pancreatic duct (probably a gallstone) was found to be the cause of recurrent acute pancreatitis in an elderly patient with severe cardiovascular disease, who was unfit for surgery. Pancreatitis settled after percutaneous drainage of the pancreatic duct, the technique described.
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PMID:Treatment of acute pancreatitis caused by calculous obstruction of the pancreatic duct by ultrasound-guided percutaneous drainage. 155 36

In a period of 5 years 790 patients underwent operation in the surgical clinic for cholelithiasis. Relaparotomy had to be conducted on 23 (2.9%) patients because intraabdominal complications occurred: escape of bile from the gallbladder bed and choledochus in its drainage, and development of peritonitis in 13 patients, pancreatitis in 2 patients, abdominal abscesses in 5, bleeding into the free abdominal cavity and the gastrointestinal tract in 3 patients. The diagnosis of complications is difficult. The developing symptoms are masked by infusion and antibiotic therapy, injection of narcotics, intestinal paresis. A complex approach is conducive to the establishment of the diagnosis: one doctor in charge, intensive surveillance of the patient, study of the results of laboratory and clinical methods of examination in dynamics. The indications for operation should be considered from the very onset in some cases. Nine (39.1%) patients died after relaparotomy.
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PMID:[Relaparotomy in surgery of cholelithiasis]. 157 39

Of 83 patients with acute pancreatitis it was possible to control 79 of them 5-16 years later, 33 on the basis of case histories and 46 personally. In 43 cases (54.4%) it was pancreatitis caused by gallstones. After an operative procedure, there followed in each case an auspicious progress without recurrence. By the patients who were not operated, there was a recurrence rate of 45.5%. In cases of pancreatitis not caused by gallstones the late progress is marked by a high recurrence and complication rate.
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PMID:[Long-term follow-up of acute pancreatitis--significance of cholecystectomy for the biliary form]. 159 24


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