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Query: UMLS:C0030305 (
pancreatitis
)
16,014
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The main problem with palliative treatment of extrahepatic
cholestasis
with an endoscopic biliary endoprosthesis is clogging. One of the factors thought to be of importance is the diameter of the stent. In order to avoid being limited by the size of the instrumentation channel of the endoscope, expandable stents have been developed. In this article we report on our preliminary clinical experience with an endoscopically placed expandable metal stent ("Wallstent") in 33 patients with extrahepatic bile duct stenoses. When fully expanded, the stent has a diameter of 30 F and a length of 6.7 cm. It was possible to successfully place a stent in every patient. Clinical improvement was achieved in all patients except one. Two patients underwent elective surgery, while one died of renal failure. Another died of septic shock after 5 weeks, but no autopsy was performed. In conclusion, our initial experience with this stent shows that at least in the short term biliary drainage was excellent, with no complications of
pancreatitis
or hemorrhage. Longer follow-up than our 4 weeks is necessary to establish the position of this stent in comparison with the conventional endoprosthesis in the management of obstructive jaundice.
...
PMID:Endoscopic placement of expandable metal stents for biliary strictures--a preliminary report on experience with 33 patients. 248 70
IBD CT is the single best modality for diagnosis and staging of patients with suspected pancreatic carcinoma. While carefully performed real-time US is an excellent technique for determining the level and etiology of
bile duct obstruction
, it is of more limited value for diagnosis of tumors in the body and tail of the gland, and is less accurate than IBD CT for assessment of tumor resectability. Thus, most patients require IBD CT for accurate, nonoperative staging. ERCP and angiography continue to be useful adjunctive procedures for evaluation of patients with suspected pancreatic carcinoma, particularly for evaluation of equivocal CT or US findings. An isolated pancreatic mass, that is, a mass with no ancillary CT or US findings of carcinoma (local extension, distant metastases), is a non-specific finding and requires further evaluation with either ERCP or angiography, and perhaps most importantly, with FNAB. Other neoplasms may mimic pancreatic ductal carcinoma, particularly islet cell carcinoma and lymphoma.
Pancreatitis
also can result in a focal pancreatic mass, simulating a neoplasm. These diseases usually respond to therapy and thus it is essential to confirm the radiologic diagnosis of pancreatic carcinoma with biopsy, particularly if surgery is not planned or if chemoradiation therapy is anticipated.
...
PMID:Radiologic diagnosis and staging of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma. 253 84
An investigation of specific course of the disease in 911 patients operated upon for acute cholecystitis with bilirubinemia has shown that mechanical jaundice resulting from choledocholithiasis takes place in a third of the patients. Obstruction of the bile duct was confirmed in 27.1% of the patients during cholangiography. Prevalence of a number of factors was noted indicating of a toxic lesion of the liver (destructive forms of acute cholecystitis in 81.0% of the patients, higher level of bilirubinemia in long terms of the disease, the presence of coexistent
pancreatitis
in 30.5%, cholangitis--in 39.3%). An investigation of 207 bioptates of the liver in acute cholecystitis has revealed fatty degeneration of hepatocytes in 56.5%, pericholangitis--in 43.0%,
cholestasis
--in 21.3% of the cases. The cause of jaundice in acute cholecystitis mainly is an alteration of the hepatic cells due to pyo-resorptive intoxication manifested as
cholestasis
and hepatitis.
...
PMID:[Pathogenesis of jaundice in acute cholecystitis]. 259 23
The biliary complications of
pancreatitis
include
cholestasis
, secondary biliary cirrhosis, cholangitis, and pseudocyst or fistula affecting the hepatobiliary system. Of these, the most relevant for radiologists is
cholestasis
caused by biliary duct stenosis in an inflamed pancreatic head. Radiologic assessment of these complications is based on judicious use of ultrasound, computed tomography, and direct cholangiography. The typical imaging finding of common bile duct stenosis due to chronic pancreatitis is gradual tapered narrowing of the intrapancreatic common bile duct, which can be portrayed by carefully accomplished computed tomography, and ultrasound as well as cholangiography. When combined with clinical assessment, imaging tests can help determine strategies for treatment, which include traditional operations as well as transhepatic, endoscopic, or percutaneous interventions.
...
PMID:Biliary complications of pancreatitis. 264 80
During the past decade, 246 infants and children treated at the Columbus Children's Hospital have required more than 4 weeks of parenteral nutrition (PN). Of the 178 survivors, 70 returned for evaluation. Sixty-eight either had adequate visualization of the gallbladder by ultrasound or had previous gallbladder surgery (39%). Of 68 children who did not survive, complete postmortem examinations or ultrasound studies were available for 16 (24%). A diagnosis of cholelithiasis was established in 11 of the 84 studied patients (13%). Six of these children (55%) have required cholecystectomy for relief of chronic abdominal pain,
pancreatitis
, or empyema of the gallbladder. One additional infant underwent cholecystostomy. Two of the four remaining patients are asymptomatic, one has episodes of abdominal colic, and one child expired of chronic hepatic insufficiency as a result of PN-associated
cholestasis
. Risk factors that predisposed these children to cholelithiasis included short bowel syndrome, lack of an ileocecal valve, and an increased number of abdominal operative procedures (P less than .05). Patients with biliary calculi also had a longer duration of parenteral feeding, and a higher incidence of both PN-associated
cholestasis
and necrotizing enterocolitis. The intergroup differences for these characteristics, however, did not achieve statistical significance. On the basis of this information, routine ultrasound examinations of the gallbladder are recommended for children maintained on PN for longer than 30 days. All patients presenting with abdominal pain who previously received PN should also be evaluated. Early elective cholecystectomy is suggested for children who develop PN-associated cholelithiasis.
...
PMID:Parenteral nutrition with associated cholelithiasis: another iatrogenic disease of infants and children. 311 62
A series of 17 cases of choledochoduodenal fistulas encountered in a 9.5-year-period (1978-1987) with 1140 endoscopic papillotomy (EPT) is presented (1.6%). The indications for duodenoscopy and endoscopic retrograde cholangiography (ERC) are
cholestasis
(78%), cholangitis (33%), upper abdominal pain (28%), jaundice (24%) and
pancreatitis
(17%). The choledochoduodenal fistulas are located on the longitudinal fold of the papilla (12 cases) and in the duodenal bulb (5 cases). Choledochoduodenal fistulas can easily be diagnosed by duodenoscopy with a side up view endoscope. As a method of direct cholangiography the ERC shows the relation of the fistula to the bile duct system. The preferred therapy of the choledochoduodenal fistula is the EPT combined with bile duct stone extraction.
...
PMID:[Spontaneous and iatrogenic choledochoduodenal fistula--endoscopic diagnosis and therapy]. 320 11
Gallstone-associated
pancreatitis
continues to have a mortality rate that approaches 10 percent. In a review of 132 fatal cases of acute pancreatitis, no less than a third of the gallstone-associated cases were diagnosed for the first time at autopsy. Early diagnosis of gallstones in these patients remains problematic, but clinical and biochemical factors may aid ultrasonography in defining patients who require endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography. Early operation is advisable in patients with mild disease, but endoscopic papillotomy should be considered in those with severe disease who fail to stabilize after admission. Chronic pancreatitis is frequently associated with cholangiographic evidence of biliary obstruction, and serum alkaline phosphatase concentrations offer a valuable means of monitoring
cholestasis
. If operation is needed to deal with biliary obstruction, the options are to carry out Roux-Y hepaticojejunostomy or resection of the pancreatic head, the choice being dictated by the indications for direct pancreatic operation.
...
PMID:Pancreatitis and the biliary tree: the continuing problem. 272 20
Common
bile duct obstruction
during acute pancreatitis usually occurs in the early symptomatic phase of the illness, involves only the distal portion of the common bile duct, and subsides with clinical improvement. We present two cases of persistent common
bile duct obstruction
that developed 2-3 months after complete clinical subsidence of the initial episode of severe acute pancreatitis and involved a long segment of the common bile duct. After surgical decompression, there was no recurrence of common
bile duct obstruction
or
pancreatitis
.
...
PMID:Delayed common bile duct obstruction in acute pancreatitis. 336 Nov 57
During a four-year period endoscopic biliary drainage (EBD)--preoperative in 25 and permanent in 45 patients--was successfully established without sphincterotomy in 70 out of 89 referred patients (79%) with malignant
bile duct obstruction
. 51 of the patients had internal stents and 19 external naso-biliary tubes. There was no procedure-related mortality or severe complications such as perforation or bleeding. One patient, however, got a moderate
pancreatitis
after stent drainage (1%). In the early drainage period (before operation or discharge) the cholangitis rate was 10%, and during the late period (after discharge) it rose to 27% of the patients. 68 of all 70 patients (94%) had a reduction in S-bilirubin concomitant with clinical improvement and 27 of the 45 patients (59%) with permanent drainage became unjaundiced. Recurrent or increasing jaundice occurred, however, in half the number of these patients (23/45) after an average of 89 days; twelve of them had a temporary regression of jaundice after exchange of stents in spite of advanced disease. The use of multiple stents did not reduce the risk of recurrent jaundice or of cholangitis. It is concluded that EBD inserted without sphincterotomy is a safe and efficient non-surgical alternative in the treatment of malignant
bile duct obstruction
.
...
PMID:Endoscopic biliary drainage in malignant bile duct obstruction. 337 87
A rare autopsy case of primary sclerosing cholangitis with sequential histologic observations of the liver is described. The patient, a 62-year-old female at the time of autopsy, presented with prolonged
cholestasis
of about 9 years duration. Initial (at 53 years) and second (at 59 years) liver biopsies disclosed fibrous enlargement of the portal tracts with loss of interlobular bile ducts, lymphoplasmacytic infiltration, a few epithelioid granulomas, piecemeal necrosis, atypical ductular proliferation and deposition of copper granules. Hypergammaglobulinemia with elevated IgM was also noted. These clinicopathological features resembled primary biliary cirrhosis. However, no florid duct lesions were found, and absence of antimitochondrial antibodies and cholangiographic demonstration of a beaded biliary tree favored a diagnosis of primary sclerosing cholangitis. The autopsied liver disclosed sclerosis and cholangioectases of the intra- and extrahepatic biliary tree in addition to biliary cirrhosis. The histology of the biliary tree disclosed nonspecific fibrosing inflammation in the extra- and intrahepatic biliary tree. Other autopsy findings included chronic thyroiditis, sialoadenitis and
pancreatitis
.
...
PMID:An autopsy case of primary sclerosing cholangitis with sequential histologic observations of the liver. 338 52
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