Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0030305 (pancreatitis)
16,014 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The mortality and the causes of death have been studied in a cohort consisting of 1548 male alcoholics in Stockholm. During the period 1969-1981 there were 542 cases of death in this population. The mortality rates were triple those for males in Stockholm generally. Using the official causes of death there was a highly significant excess mortality in the following diagnostic groups: Cancer in the upper digestive region, primary hepatic cancer, cirrhosis in the liver, pancreatitis, pneumonia, alcoholism and alcoholic poisoning, suicides and other causes of violent death as well as ischemic heart disease. The underlying and contributing causes of death on the death certificates were reclassified according to ICD-rules using clinical records and autopsy protocols. It was found that the underlying cause of death was incorrect in 21.8% of the cases. Important information was withheld in further 19.8%. After validation there was no longer any excess mortality in ischemic heart disease. The number of alcohol-related diagnoses, i.e. alcoholic cardiomyopathy, cirrhosis and fatty liver with alcoholism and alcoholic intoxication, was much greater. It is concluded that there is a underreporting of alcohol-related diseases and injuries which has a great influence on the reliability of death statistics.
...
PMID:Validation of diagnoses on death certificates for male alcoholics in Stockholm. 358 75

Pathogenetic associations between benign hepatic tumours and liver damage were studied in an autopsy series of 91 males with high incidence of alcoholism. Information on the consumption of alcohol was obtained by interviewing a family member or a close friend of the deceased. The reported use of alcohol correlated well with the increase of fatty and fibrotic changes and with the occurrence of liver cirrhosis, alcoholic hepatitis or pancreatitis. Benign bile duct tumours (bile duct adenomas and von Meyenburg's complexes) (n = 26) were associated with the occurrence of bridging (P less than 0.0005) and periportal (P less than 0.025) fibrosis of the liver and, independently from these, with chronic pancreatitis (P less than 0.05) and with non-parasitic liver cysts (n = 14) (P less than 0.01). The weight of the liver was greater (P less than 0.01) in males with focal nodular hyperplasia (n = 3). Cavernous hemangioma (n = 19) occurred independently of the parameters studied. None of the tumours showed significant correlation to liver cirrhosis, alcoholic hepatitis, fatty liver or diseases of the gallbladder. The results are in line with observations on the reactive nature and connections to fibropolycystic liver disease of benign bile duct tumours in laboratory animals and in man. Their presence in human liver specimens should be taken into account as a sign of liver damage, in this study related to heavy use of alcohol or to chronic inflammation of the pancreas.
...
PMID:Benign bile duct tumours, non-parasitic liver cysts and liver damage in males. 395 Mar 64

Alcohol has at least two actions on essential fatty acid (EFA) and Prostaglandin (PG) metabolism. It enhances the conversion of dihomogammalinolenic acid (DGLA) to PGE1 but it blocks the activity of the delta-6-desaturase, an enzyme necessary for replenishment of DGLA stores from dietary precursors. The acute effect of ethanol is therefore an increased production of PGE1 but chronic consumption will lead to depletion of DGLA and PGE1. Withdrawal from alcohol will lead to a precipitous fall in PGE1. PGE1 is known to have profound effects on the nervous system and behaviour. Patients with mania produce more PGE1 than normal while those with depression make less. Alcoholics may drink to maintain a normal PGE1 level, something which will require more and more ethanol as DGLA is depleted. In both animals and humans PGE1 or its precursor, gamma-linolenic acid (GLA) have been shown to attenuate the acute withdrawal syndrome. PGE1 injections prevent the development of fatty liver in alcohol-treated animals. Defective EFA and PGE1 metabolism are known to lead to increased fibrosis, reproductive failure, cardiomyopathy, cardiovascular disorders, gastritis and pancreatitis and could therefore be the basis for these disorders in alcoholics. A PGE1 deficiency could also be responsible for the fetal alcohol syndrome. Three other agents are known to produce constellations of fetal defects very similar to those found in the alcohol syndrome. These other factors are dihphenylhydantoin, lithium, and a deficiency of zinc. These three factors and excessive alcohol consumption all lead to PGE1 deficiency by different routes. If this concept is correct, the key to the management of alcoholism and its medical complications lies in the provision of GLA or DGLA, fatty acids which by-pass the alcohol blocked step and which are unfortunately unlikely to be present in any normal diet. Unlike many concepts of alcoholism and alcohol damage, the EFA/PGE1 idea is very readily testable and already has considerable experimental support.
...
PMID:A biochemical basis for alcoholism and alcohol-induced damage including the fetal alcohol syndrome and cirrhosis: interference with essential fatty acid and prostaglandin metabolism. 625 73

Ethanol-associated fatty liver was induced in rats fed a nutritionally deficient liquid diet containing 36% of total calories as ethanol. Control rats received the same diet with sucrose substituted isocalorically for ethanol. After 40 days, hepatic lipid content of the ethanol-maintained animals was four-fold greater than controls and ultrastructural changes in hepatocytes were well established. Clearance of intravenously administered human enterokinase from the circulation as well as bile flow were, however, the same in both groups. The proportion of enterokinase appearing in catalytically active form in bile after intravenous injection was substantially greater in the ethanol-maintained animals than the isocaloric controls; the difference was highly significant (p less than 0.001) and reached two- to four-fold after 70 days on the diet. These findings would suggest that the ability of hepatocytes to degrade enterokinase cleared from the blood may be bypassed or impaired by prolonged ethanol consumption and a deficient diet. Catalytically active enterokinase in bile may participate in the development of some types of acute necrotising pancreatitis.
...
PMID:Biliary excretion of enterokinase in rats: studies in alcoholic rats with fatty liver. 633 13

The assumption that tetracycline HCl can cause acute pancreatitis has been accepted since reports began to appear implicating it as a cause of fatty liver in pregnancy with associated pancreatitis. It is listed as an etiologic factor for acute pancreatitis in reference articles and standard medical textbooks without good documentation of this association in the absence of fatty liver. This report describes a documented case of tetracycline HCl-induced acute pancreatitis without associated overt liver disease.
...
PMID:Tetracycline-induced pancreatitis. 645 64

The precision of CA 19-9 RIA kit was evaluated by recovery, reproducibility and dilution test with very satisfactory results. The CA 19-9 value in sera from 52 healthy individuals and from 224 patients with gastric intestinal cancer and other benign disease, showed an increased positive rate in several cases of gastric intestinal cancer. For example, the positive rate in pancreatic cancer, bile duct cancer, colo-rectal cancer, gastric cancer, esophagus cancer, primary biliary cirrhosis diabetes mellitus, liver cirrhosis and chronic hepatitis was 60%, 75%, 55.6%, 45.6%, 20%, 28.6%, 22.7%, 13.7% and 1.7% respectively. By contrast, values from patients with acute hepatitis, fulminant hepatitis, fatty liver, gastric duodenal ulcer, pancreatitis, and primary liver cancer were within the normal range. In this study, CA 19-9 RIA were found to be significant as an adjunct in the management of patients with gastrointestinal cancer, especially pancreatic cancer, and bile duct cancer.
...
PMID:[Serum determination of CA 19-9 in patients with digestive cancers and its diagnostic evaluation]. 658 10

Reye syndrome was observed in a 5 1/2-year-old girl after an appendectomy. It was accompanied by insulin-resistant hyperglycaemia. Central adaptation failure resulted in death on the fourth day of treatment. Post mortem and histological results showed phlegmonous pancreatitis of the excretory type, apart from the established manifestations of Reye syndrome (severe cerebral oedema, excessive hepatic steatosis, moderate fatty degeneration of renal tubuli). Neuropathology revealed exclusively signs of hypoxic damage. Pancreatitis, usually necrotising or haemorrhagic, is not infrequent in Reye's syndrome. Girls are predominantly affected and pancreatitis is associated with a tendency towards sometimes serious hyperglycaemia. The possibility of this complication should be considered in the treatment of Reye syndrome.
...
PMID:[Reye's syndrome with pancreatitis and hypoxic brain damage]. 669 70

We report a case of fatty infiltration of the liver in a 27-year-old Hispanic woman. She went to an outside hospital in her third trimester of pregnancy with abdominal pain, jaundice, peripheral edema, and diffuse intravascular coagulation. An emergent cesarean section was performed, and she developed symptoms of acute hemorrhagic pancreatitis and altered mental status. She was transferred to Harbor County Hospital, where a computed tomography scan showed a fatty liver, and a liver biopsy confirmed the diagnosis of fatty liver of pregnancy. Prompt recognition and immediate termination of pregnancy with intensive, supportive care are essentials in the management of fatty liver of pregnancy.
...
PMID:Acute fatty liver of pregnancy: laparoscopy-assisted diagnosis. 804 69

Dieticians computed the fat and cholesterol contents of 11 foods that were commercially produced as ready-to-eat food from food component lists and obtained the P/S ratio (polysaturated/saturated fatty acids) from the fatty acid component list. Meanwhile the same foods were diluted and homogenized. The internal standard was combined with hepatadecanoic acid and tricaprin. The samples that had been extracted by the Folch method were analyzed for their lipid content (GC analysis using a HS-SS-10 columns for fatty acids and an OV-1 column for lipid and cholesterol). A significant positive correlation was noted between the results of dieticians' analysis and those obtained from a gas chromatographic analysis of lipid and cholesterol contents and the P/S ratio, proving that lipid analysis of food by dieticians is highly reliable. Therefore for diseases (such as hyperlipemia, arteriosclerosis, obesity, diabetes mellitus, fatty liver, and pancreatitis) in which dietary factors have a significant effect on their clinical course, dietary instructions on dietary fats based on an analysis by dieticians are considered to be effective.
...
PMID:A study on the values computed by dieticians and chemical analysis of fats, cholesterol, and P/S ratio in food. 818 6

A woman with acute fatty liver of pregnancy developed fulminant hepatic failure after delivery, a time when spontaneous recovery was expected. Pancreatitis and multiple organ failure was documented and intensive treatment in a critical care unit was needed to support organ function. She underwent plasmapheresis due to extreme hyperbilirubinemia and coma. She recovered completely.
...
PMID:[Acute fatty liver of pregnancy complicated by pancreatitis]. 930 75


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Next >>