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

Gallbladder stones remain asymptomatic over a long period. The biliary colic is the typical pain caused by these stones. Dyspeptic symptoms seem to be unrelated to the presence of gallstones. Acute cholecystitis, a serious complication of gallstone disease, spans a wide spectrum of clinical findings. The typical signs are right upper abdominal pain and tenderness, fever, leucocytosis and Murphy's sign. 35% of patients experience gallbladder empyema or perforation. Localized gallbladder perforation, characterized by high fever, severe right upper abdominal pain and tenderness and a palpable mass is often difficult to distinguish from acute cholecystitis. Free perforation into the abdominal cavity causes diffuse peritonitis. Gallbladder perforation into the lumen of an adjacent organ produces fistulas, mostly with minimal symptoms or a pain relief after decompression of the inflamed gallbladder. Air in the bile ducts and on some occasions bile-acid-induced diarrhea may result. Rarely, the perforation of large stones leads to an occlusion of the GI tract and results in a gallstone ileus. Common bile duct stones may be asymptomatic or cause bile duct obstruction with biliary colics and jaundice. Acute bacterial cholangitis characterized by Charcot's triad (pain, jaundice and fever) and the acute biliary pancreatitis with its typical symptoms are the serious complications of common bile duct stones, associated with a high mortality rate. The clinical manifestations of a gallstone disease and its complications reveal important diagnostic features, but the most important diagnostic features, modalities are the imaging procedures. They are decisive for an accurate therapy.
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PMID:[Clinical manifestations of cholelithiasis and its complications]. 776 32

Bile duct stones are associated with a high rate of severe complications such as bile duct obstruction, cholangitis and biliary pancreatitis; therefore, stones of the common bile duct should always be removed. Today the endoscopic sphincterotomy and stone removal are the therapy of choice. When the gallbladder is still present, the duct stones should be removed endoscopically before laparoscopic cholecystectomy. For difficult bile duct stones, various procedures like mechanical lithotripsy, intracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy (ISWL), intracorporeal laser lithotripsy (ILL) and extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy (ESWL) have been shown to increase the success rate of duct clearance to up to 95 to 100%. Before laparoscopic cholecystectomy, an ERCP should be performed, if there is a history or repeated biliary colic pain, cholangitis or biliary pancreatitis, if on ultrasound the diameter of the common bile duct is greater than 6mm, or if there are signs of cholestasis in the laboratory. In acute cholangitis, urgent endoscopic sphincterotomy has been shown to decrease the morbidity and mortality rate compared to surgical interventions. In acute biliary pancreatitis, early sphincterotomy also decreases the rate of morbidity significantly.
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PMID:[Endoscopic therapy of gallstones. Indications for ERCP]. 776 35

The purpose of this study was to evaluate a new endoscopic ultrasonography (EUS) device using a curved-array transducer with a 120-degree sagittal scan angle in the diagnosis of pancreatobiliary disease. From October 1991 to June 1993, 94 patients underwent EUS to assess radiologically detected anomalies (62 cases), tumors of the papilla of Vater (seven cases) and laboratory findings demonstrating cholestasis of unexplained origin (25 cases). In 41 cases, surgery was performed after EUS, and in 40 cases ERCP was also performed. The EUS diagnosis of chronic calcifying pancreatitis was confirmed by ERCP in 14 of 18 patients. In 30 cases, EUS detected a pancreatic tumor. In 26 of these patients, surgery was performed, confirming EUS findings regarding tumor size, portal, mesenteric, and splenic invasion, and lymph-node involvement in 20 of 25 pancreatic carcinomas (80%). In five of seven patients in whom EUS detected ampullary carcinoma, cephalic duodenopancreatectomy was performed, and the histology of the surgical specimen confirmed the diagnosis in all five. In 25 patients presenting with cholestasis of unexplained origin, EUS provided the diagnosis in 22 cases (88%). EUS using a curved-array transducer appears to be an effective diagnostic method for pancreatobiliary lesions. These results should be further evaluated in a larger series of patients.
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PMID:Endoscopic ultrasonography with a linear-type echoendoscope in the evaluation of 94 patients with pancreatobiliary disease. 800 84

The features of the common bile duct (CBD) have been checked in 78 chronic pancreatitis patients in order to evaluate the frequency of extrahepatic bile duct changes, possible associated factors and effects on the outcome of the disease. Fifty of the 78 patients had an intrapancreatic stricture of the CBD and 24 of them also showed an upstream dilatation. No relationship was found between the features of the CBD and the severity of the pancreatitis, the presence of calcifications and the length of the disease. Humoral signs of impaired bile flow were found in 20 subjects, 19 of whom had an intra-pancreatic stricture of the CBD. Sixteen of these 19 patients also showed an upstream dilatation and five of them had overt jaundice. A surgical intervention on the biliary tree was carried out in 7 patients, all with a biliary stricture. Six of them also had a CBD dilatation over the stricture (p < 0.02 versus patients without CBD stricture). In conclusion CBD involvement during chronic pancreatitis is quite frequent but poorly predictable and should be checked in all patients with humoral cholestasis in order to prevent further complications.
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PMID:Common bile duct involvement in chronic pancreatitis. 803 82

CA 19-9 is used as a tumour marker of the upper gastrointestinal tract. However, extremely elevated CA 19-9 levels are found also in patients with benign diseases. Cholestasis was present in 97.1% of patients with high elevated CA 19-9, independent of their primary disease. 50% of patients with non-malignant diseases and increased CA 19-9 levels showed liver cirrhosis, cholecystitis, pancreatitis and/or hepatitis. In 8.8% no explanation was found for the extremely high CA 19-9 level. The results provide evidence of different factors influencing the CA 19-9 level.
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PMID:The reliability of highly elevated CA 19-9 levels. 808 16

Twelve patients (11 female) with an extrahepatic biliary cyst (six type I, three type II and three type III according to the classification of Todani) are reviewed with emphasis on aetiology, clinical features and long-term results at follow-up of 3-10 years. The clinical manifestations were abdominal pain, cholestasis with jaundice, fever and episodes of pancreatitis. The diagnosis was established before surgery in all cases by ultrasonography, endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography, percutaneous transhepatic cholangiography and computed tomography. An abnormally long common channel was found in four patients. Three patients had had cysts drained internally in the 1970s. Of these three patients, one developed carcinoma of the cyst 23 years later. Radical excision of the dilated bile duct and reconstruction by Roux-en-Y hepaticojejunostomy was performed in nine cases. Two patients, each with a small choledochocele, were treated successfully by endoscopic sphincterotomy and stone extraction. There were no serious postoperative complications. All nine patients operated on remained in good health for 3-10 years. These results support radical excision of the cystically dilated bile duct with reconstruction by end-to-side Roux-en-Y hepaticojejunostomy for types I and II cyst. Endoscopic treatment of type III choledochocele should be limited to the management of smaller lesions.
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PMID:Cystic dilatation of the common bile duct: surgical treatment and long-term results. 817 22

In a five year review of 648 patients with chronic pancreatitis, 446 (68.8%) were documented with regional complications consisting of biliary, duodenal or colonic obstruction, pseudocysts, haemorrhage, pancreatic ascites and gastric varices. Although the majority could be treated conservatively, surgical intervention was needed in 129 patients (28.9%). The commonest operations were choledocho-duodenostomy for distal bile duct obstruction, gastro-enterostomy for duodenal obstruction, local resection for colon obstruction, cyst-gastrostomy for pseudocysts, duct-enteric anastomosis for pancreatic ascites and splenectomy for gastric varices. Operative mortality was 8.5% and morbidity 27.9%. During 1-5 year follow-up, re-admission for pancreatitis was needed in 24%. No secondary biliary cirrhosis was encountered in long standing bile duct obstruction, but fibrosis was present in 73% of liver biopsies. Cholangitis occurred in 14%. Angiographic embolisation was useful in the control of massive bleeding from peri-pancreatic visceral arteries. Although relief of pain in chronic pancreatitis has generally been disappointing, regional complications, occurring in the majority of patients, can be corrected satisfactorily by surgical intervention.
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PMID:Surgical intervention for regional complications of chronic pancreatitis. 817 59

Biliary complications are more frequent in laparoscopic than in open cholecystectomy. The aim of the study was to evaluate the diagnostic and therapeutic value of endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) in the management of complications of laparoscopic cholecystectomy. We therefore report on the result of 49 ERCP after laparoscopic cholecystectomy done at our department between January 1991 and March 1993. Patients were referred from 16 different surgical institutions. In 29 cases endoscopic sphincterotomy was performed without complications. Indications for ERCP were "persistent biliary pain" (n = 27), bile leakage (n = 7), pancreatitis (n = 5), abscess (n = 5), painless jaundice (n = 3) and asymptomatic bile duct stone in routine cholangiography (n = 2). In the group of patients with "persistent biliary pain" we found bile duct stones in 12 (80%) of 15 cases with cholestasis and in 3 (30%) of 10 without cholestasis. The stones were endoscopically removed after sphincterotomy. In 2 patients without cholestasis, cannulation of the bile duct failed. 7 patients showed biliary leakage, 4 from inadequate clipping of the cystic stump (2 in combination with a common bile duct stone), 2 from the hepatic duct and 1 from insufficient anastomosis after reconstruction of a common bile duct. After endoscopic sphincterotomy and, if necessary, stone extraction by Dormia basket, leakage from the cystic stump and hepatic duct healed. The insufficient common bile duct anastomosis required reconstruction by hepaticojejunostomy. Three of 5 patients with postoperative pancreatitis had common bile duct stones, while one with chronic pancreatitis had a concrement in the pancreatic duct which was endoscopically removed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[The value of ERCP in the diagnosis and therapy of complications of laparoscopic cholecystectomy]. 820 76

Fifty-four patients with symptomatic gallbladder stones were treated by extra-corporeal shock wave lithotripsy (ESWL) and oral bile acids on an outpatient basis. In 49 patients (90%), the stones were successfully fragmented to fragments < 5 mm on follow-up ultrasonography. Patients underwent 1-3 lithotripsy sessions with 7,500-9,750 shock waves per session. The gallbladder clearance rate of fragments was dependent mainly on the number of stones and reached 59% for patients with one or two stones, compared to 34% for patients with more than two stones after 9 months follow-up. The only side effects noted were mild abdominal pain, transient microscopic hematuria and minimal impairment in liver function tests. There were no serious complications such as cholecystitis, bile duct obstruction, or pancreatitis. These results, which are comparable with those of other groups using the same shock wave lithotriptor, indicate that this therapy may become an alternative treatment for selected patients with symptomatic gallbladder stones, especially those who are at high risk for surgical treatment.
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PMID:Extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy of gallstones: early experience in an Israeli population. 827 Mar 93

Two patients are described who presented symptoms of anorexia and weight loss. Further investigation revealed choledocholithiasis in both cases, though neither patient had the classic symptoms of biliary colic, jaundice, cholangitis, or pancreatitis. The associated weight loss and anorexia resolved completely after successful bile duct surgery. These cases emphasize the need to exclude benign causes of common bile duct obstruction in patients with anorexia, weight loss, and abnormal results of liver function tests, mimicking a possible underlying malignancy.
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PMID:Anorexia and weight loss as the solitary symptoms of choledocholithiasis. 843 3


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