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Query: UMLS:C0030305 (
pancreatitis
)
16,014
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In children with pancreatic disease, computed tomography (CT) has a primary role in the evaluation of
pancreatitis
, trauma, and malignancy. At CT, pancreatic abnormalities may manifest as pancreatic enlargement (tumor, acute pancreatitis), pancreatic atrophy (
cystic fibrosis
, chronic pancreatitis), cystic lesions (pseudocysts, congenital simple cysts, autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease, von Hippel-Lindau disease,
cystic fibrosis
, cystic neoplasms), or fatty replacement (
cystic fibrosis
, Shwachman-Diamond syndrome, history of steroid therapy, Cushing syndrome, Johanson-Blizzard syndrome, obesity). CT is the best modality for evaluation of
pancreatitis
, allowing detection of pancreatic abnormalities as well as abnormal extrapancreatic fluid collections. In children who have undergone blunt abdominal trauma, CT has been shown to be the best initial imaging study, being more sensitive than ultrasound for detection of pancreatic injury. In neoplastic conditions, CT demonstrates the extent of disease, enables characterization of the tissue components of the tumor, and allows accurate posttreatment follow-up. Although the various diseases of the pancreas may have overlapping appearances at CT, the correct diagnosis can often be made on the basis of the CT findings in combination with the clinical history, laboratory data, and the patient's age.
...
PMID:Pancreatic disease in children and young adults: evaluation with CT. 974 14
Cystic fibrosis
is by far the commonest cause of chronic pancreatitis in children, but
pancreatitis
itself is only rarely its presenting feature. In this paper an hypothesis for the development of the pancreatic lesions is presented. Impaired activation of pancreatic proteases in the small intestine is perceived as the pivotal problem that leads to continual feedback release of cholecystokinin, thus, in effect, causing a chronic hyperstimulation
pancreatitis
with intra-acinar activation of zymogens and, when bicarbonate secretion falls, precipitation of 'Reg' and other proteins in the duct system. This position contrasts with that in hereditary
pancreatitis
in which a mutation in the cationic trypsinogen gene leads to a form of trypsin that resists degradation by mesotrypsin and enzyme Y. A survey of the literature suggests that oxidant stress is a plausible contributor to pancreatic injury in both these diseases and in several other conditions linked with childhood
pancreatitis
.
...
PMID:Paediatric and hereditary aspects of chronic pancreatitis. 983 35
Chronic pancreatitis is a rare disease in children and is usually secondary to underlying diseases such as hereditary
pancreatitis
,
cystic fibrosis
, hyperlipidemia, prolonged malnutrition, gallstones or anomalies of the biliary-pancreatic duct system. Hereditary pancreatitis is a common cause of chronic pancreatitis in children but is often unrecognized until months or years later. We report here a family with hereditary
pancreatitis
in which four members are affected.
...
PMID:Hereditary pancreatitis: report of a family from Turkey. 989 1
Except for
cystic fibrosis
, which is the most frequent genetic disorder in the Caucasian population, diseases of the exocrine pancreas are relatively uncommon in children. However, they are many and varied in terms of their pathogenesis and clinical manifestation. They can be classified as: (1) congenital anatomical abnormalities, (2) congenital secretory insufficiencies, and (3)
pancreatitis
. In all of these diseases, when pancreatic insufficiency (whether partial or complete) is present, the nutritional status of the patients must be investigated regularly, and pancreatic enzymes as well as nutritional supplementations must be prescribed as soon as malnutrition is present, or even prophylactically. The preservation of good nutritional status is the guarantee of a better prognosis.
...
PMID:Pancreatic diseases (excluding cystic fibrosis). 1007 7
The clinical histories of 46 adult patients (24 men and 22 women, mean age 20.6 +/- 5.1 years) diagnosed of
cystic fibrosis
were reviewed evaluating the digestive alterations. The age at diagnosis of
cystic fibrosis
was 5.63 +/- 5.3 years (range: newborns-19 years). The initial diagnosis was established by ileus meconium, in four, lung disease in 15, steatorrhea in 12, lung disease and steatorrhea in 13 and following the diagnosis of
cystic fibrosis
in siblings in two. Four patients presented ileus meconium, nine occlusive syndrome of the distal intestine, 42 steatorrhea (20 severe, 12 moderate and 10 mild), with the severity of the steatorrhea not being associated with the severity of the respiratory insufficiency. Two patients presents rectal prolapse, five gastroesophageal reflux syndrome (four with hiatal hernia), six cholelithiasis, one recurrent
pancreatitis
without detection of biliary lithiasis, one neonatal cholestasis and 10 malnutrition (five severe and five moderate) fundamentally in relation to the severity of the lung disease and, to a lesser degree, liver disease. In 10 patients chronic liver disease was diagnosed corresponding to established cirrhosis in seven, indicating liver transplantation in two. In most cases, the liver disease was already manifest in adolescence even in the cirrhotic stage. Cholangiography by magnetic resonance was useful in the study of liver disease showing abnormalities which imitated primary sclerosing cholangitis. Treatment with ursodesoxicholic acid at a dosis of 20 mg/kg/day led to a significant decrease in the transaminase values and overall of gammaglutamyltranspeptidase but did not avoid complications in the cirrhotic stages. Genetic studies performed in 36 patients detected the delta F508 mutation in 69.4%, being found in almost all of the patients with ileus meconium, occlusive syndrome of the distal intestine, liver disease, cholelithiasis and malnutrition.
...
PMID:[Digestive alterations in cystic fibrosis. Retrospective study of a series of 46 adult patients]. 1019 90
The leading causes of chronic pancreatitis are alcohol and idiopathic
pancreatitis
. The importance of genetic factors in chronic pancreatitis has been uncertain. Recently, however, it was learned that many patients with idiopathic chronic pancreatitis have mutations of the
cystic fibrosis
gene. This article reviews the evidence that links mutations of this gene to unexplained
pancreatitis
, and discusses the implications of this for the evaluation, pathogenesis, classification, and possible prevention of
pancreatitis
.
...
PMID:Are mutations in the cystic fibrosis gene important in chronic pancreatitis? 1047 Mar 22
Cystic fibrosis
(CF) is a genetic disease with multisystem involvement in which defective chloride transport across membranes causes dehydrated secretions. The protein encoded by the CF gene--the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR)--functions as a cyclic adenosine monophosphate-regulated chloride channel. The ability to detect CFTR mutations has led to the recognition of its association with a variety of conditions, including chronic bronchitis, sinusitis with nasal polyps,
pancreatitis
, and, in men, infertility. This article reviews the impact of CF on the pancreas, the role of the CFTR protein in pancreatic secretion, and some of the exciting research identifying mutations in the CFTR gene as a risk factor for idiopathic acute and chronic pancreatitis.
...
PMID:Pancreatitis and cystic fibrosis gene mutations. 1050 35
The causes of acute pancreatitis are well documented and usually are divided into alcohol-induced, gallstone, miscellaneous, and idiopathic when no immediate cause is found. Clinically, the cause is either immediately discernable from the history and a few standard investigations, less obvious and requiring more detailed studies, or obscure and even speculative. The physician can whittle away at the idiopathic group by increasingly recognizing causes such as biliary sludge or microlithiasis, sphincter of Oddi dysfunction, hereditary
pancreatitis
,
cystic fibrosis
, or autoimmune causes. The prevalence of these and other rare conditions is the focus of intense research. Whether these increasingly recognized causes will significantly alter the current incidence of 10% to 30% of cases classified as idiopathic
pancreatitis
, only time will tell.
...
PMID:Causes of acute and recurrent pancreatitis. Clinical considerations and clues to diagnosis. 1050 37
We report a case of
pancreatitis
as the first symptom of
cystic fibrosis
in a 22-year-old woman. The diagnosis was suspected upon the history of nasal polyposis and severe episodes of respiratory infections in infancy. The diagnosis was confirmed by sweat test. Genotyping showed a compound heterozygosity for mutations delta F508 and 5T. Acute pancreatitis is a rare manifestation of
cystic fibrosis
and an exceptional mode of initial presentation of the disease. It occurs in pancreatic sufficient patients, especially in young adults. This exceptional case shows that
cystic fibrosis
should be suspected in each case of idiopathic
pancreatitis
. Indications of cholecystectomy in patients with associated gallbladder lithiasis is discussed.
...
PMID:[Acute pancreatitis revealing cystic fibrosis in an adult]. 1053 46
Hereditary pancreatitis (HP) is an autosomal dominant disorder characterized by recurrent acute attacks of severe abdominal pain with an onset in early childhood. Many HP patients progress to complicated chronic pancreatitis and/or pancreatic cancer. Initially, a single mutation R117H in the cationic trypsinogen gene was detected in all affected members of five unrelated HP families. Further studies identified a second mutation (N21L) in two HP families without the R117H mutation. Before the association between cationic trypsinogen and HP was found, we detected a cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene mutation (L327R) in all affected individuals of a family with HP. We therefore performed a mutational analysis for R117H and N21L in cationic trypsinogen in this and three additional unrelated families with HP. The R117H mutation was detected in all 9 affected members of three HP families and in 3 asymptomatic but at-risk relatives. However, neither the R117H nor the N21L mutation in the cationic trypsinogen were found in the HP family with the L327R alteration in CFTR. The L327R allele segregates with the disease within this HP family and was not detected on 360 unrelated Caucasian non-CF chromosomes. Although close to 800 different mutations have been detected in the CF gene of
cystic fibrosis
patients, L327R is a new alteration, not yet reported in connection with CF. The results of this study indicate that the CFTR gene may play a role in the etiology of minority of cases with HP and suggest that hereditary
pancreatitis
is genetically heterogeneous disease.
...
PMID:Evidence that hereditary pancreatitis is genetically heterogeneous disorder. 1065 40
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