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Query: UMLS:C0030305 (
pancreatitis
)
16,014
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The authors refer on 24 patients over 65 years of age suffering from obliterating arteriopathy of the lower limbs undergoing reconstructive surgery no matter the high surgical risk. These patients represent 12.3% of all vascular patients treated in five years of activity. The following risk factors are considered: 1) Heart disease; 2) Altered lipid metabolism; 3) Diabetes; 4) Arterial
hypertension
; 5) Hyperuricaemia; 6) Obesity; 7) Renal or hepatic insufficiency. Immediate results were excellent in 23 cases; one patient suffering from aortic barrage died of acute haemorrhagic
pancreatitis
. Follow-up results also remained good; only one patient had to be re-operated two years later (disobliteration of branch of prosthesis) with a happy outcome. Two other patients died because of non vascular causes. The authors do not consider age amongst risk factors and prefer the extraperitoneal approach in disobliterating operations and refer using the transperitoneal route without problems in aortobifemoral bypasses. The authors state that risk factors did not alter neither the short nor the long-term follow-up results possibly because of medical correction of associated pathological states.
...
PMID:[Reconstructive surgery in high-risk arteriopathic patients]. 721 68
We used the anesthetized sheep lung lymph preparation to examine the effects of acute hemorrhagic
pancreatitis
on pulmonary transvascular fluid and protein exchange. Induction of acute pancreatitis by injection of trypsin and sodium taurocholate into the pancreatic duct caused significant increases (p less than 0.05) in lung lymph flow, ratio of lymph to plasma protein concentration (L/P ratio), and transvascular protein clearance. Pulmonary arterial and pulmonary arterial wedge pressures did not change significantly, but pulmonary blood flow decreased (p less than 0.05) and pulmonary vascular resistance increased (p less than 0.05). In contrast to the effects of acute pancreatitis, left atrial
hypertension
caused increases in lung lymph flow that were associated with decreases in the L/P ratio. Extravascular lung water content was increased after acute pancreatitis by 25% from the value obtained in sham-operated animals in which saline was injected into the pancreatic duct. These findings indicate that acute hemorrhagic
pancreatitis
causes an increase in pulmonary vascular permeability to proteins. Because pulmonary vascular pressures did not change, the increased permeability may be due to the cellular and humoral factors rather than hemodynamic mechanisms.
...
PMID:Effect of acute pancreatitis on pulmonary transvascular fluid and protein exchange. 727 Oct 55
The pressure conditions in the pancreatic duct of healthy dogs and of animals with experimentally induced acute serous or necrotic
pancreatitis
were studied with the Hess-type manometer successfully applied in biliary surgery. In acute pancreatitis
hypertension
was observed which was more marked in the group with necrotic
pancreatitis
.
...
PMID:[Pressure conditions in the pancreatic duct in acute experimental pancreatitis]. 734 40
This article presents six cases of hemolytic-uremic syndrome, defined as the combination of acute renal insufficiency, microangiopathic hemolytic anemia, and thrombocytopenia, in six adult patients, two men and four women, between 20 and 52 years old. Three of the cases were considered idiopathic, two secondary to the use of oral contraceptives, and one appeared after an abortion. All of the patients presented severe
hypertension
, frequently accompanied by increased renin levels; in no cases was there any important coagulation disorder. In all of the biopsies there were lesions denoting intravascular thrombosis in the arterioles and medium-sized arteries of the kidney, as well as thickening of the glomerular basal membrane. Immunofluorescence was positive for fibrinogen and C3 in the majority of biopsies examined. Two patients suffered acute pancreatitis,
hypertension
having perhaps been an important factor in this complication. One of the two patients died as a result of acute hemorrhagic
pancreatitis
and was the only death in the series. Of the five remaining subjects, three required periodic hemodyalisis and the other two presented a considerable degree of chronic renal failure, which confirms that the prognosis for the hemolytic-uremic syndrome is much worse for the adult than for the child.
...
PMID:[Hemolytic-uremic syndrome in the adult (author's transl)]. 735 70
Oral contraceptive (OC) use is discussed as a factor in various diseases and disorders of internal medicine. Studies show a significant increase in the risk of developing thromboembolism, pulmonary embolism, cerebrovascular incidents, and coronary infarction among OC users. These problems are caused by changes in blood coagulation, hemodynamics, fibrinolysis, and the damaging of vascular walls, all of which are attributable to OC use. OC use leads to a minor
hypertension
in 1% of users during the first year of use and in 2.5% by the fifth year. This is initially caused by increased angiotensinogen production in the liver; later, sodium retention caused by the gestagen OC component, mineralocorticoid activity and vascular damage play a part in causing this
hypertension
. Glucose tolerance is reduced by OCs; lipid metabolism is affected in many ways: e.g. elevation of plasma triglyceride levels. OC users run an increased risk of developing hepatic tumors. Jaundice, Budd Chiari syndrome, gall stones, and
pancreatitis
have all been observed among OC users. Contraindications to OC use are listed.
...
PMID:[Internal medicine problems regarding contraception. Part I]. 744 16
Clinico-instrumental examination of 226 patients showed that there were no fatal outcomes directly after endoscopic papillosphincterotomy, the number of complications was approximately the same as after transduodenal operations on the major duodenal papilla but they took a much easier course. The high effectiveness of an endoscopic operation was confirmed in the immediate postoperative period (absence of biliary
hypertension
, jaundice,
pancreatitis
, cholangitis). In the late-term periods after EPST restenosis was rarely encountered (3.9%); duodeno-biliary reflux caused no serious disorders, while the functional activity of the sphincter Oddi which had been operated on was partly maintained in 84.2% of patients.
...
PMID:[Immediate, early and late results of endoscopic papillosphincterotomy]. 747 98
Obstruction of the main pancreatic duct with secondary upstream ductal
hypertension
is one cause of pain in patients with pancreatic cancer. Pancreatic endoscopic stenting and decompression of the pancreatic duct have been effective in the treatment of pain secondary to chronic calcifying
pancreatitis
and in one case of pancreatic cancer. We describe eight patients with unresectable cancer of the pancreatic head associated with upstream dilatation of the pancreatic duct and severe pancreatic "obstructive"-type pain (correlation with meals and pain radiation to the back) in which a pancreatic stent was inserted across the neoplastic stricture. No mortality was associated with the procedure. All patients but one were free of pain within 48 hours after endoscopic pancreatic stenting, and all discontinued narcotics. Mean survival time was 165.5 days (range, 26 to 575 days). Six patients were still without symptoms, whereas two had a painful relapse a few days before death. No clinical evidence of pancreatic clogged stent was observed during follow-up. Endoscopic pancreatic drainage is a safe and effective way of controlling cancer pain in selected cases and should be considered as a further therapeutic option in these patients.
...
PMID:Treatment of "obstructive" pain by endoscopic drainage in patients with pancreatic head carcinoma. 750 50
Blockage of the rat pancreatico-biliary duct (PBDO) for 4 hours and secretin infusion (0.2 CU [Clinical Unit]/kg/hr) caused significant rises in portal serum amylase, cathepsin B levels, pancreatic water content, and pancreatic amylase content as well as lysosomal and mitochondrial fragility. Impaired pancreatic adenylate energy charge levels were also noted. These changes tended to continue for 12 hours after the release of PBDO and disappeared after 24 hours. All the changes induced by PBDO with secretin infusion were no longer observed at 48 hours. The administration of a new potent protease inhibitor, E-3123 at a dose of 5 mg/kg/hr during PBDO markedly attenuated all the parameters examined, exerting a significant protective effect on acinar cells in this model. These results indicate the important roles of subcellular organelle fragility and impaired pancreatic energy metabolism in the pathogenesis of pancreatic injuries induced by common channel obstruction with intraductal
hypertension
, and also indicate the possible usefulness of E-3123 in the treatment of acute pancreatitis such as gallstone
pancreatitis
.
...
PMID:Effect of short-term pancreatico-biliary duct obstruction with intraductal hypertension on subcellular organelle fragility and pancreatic adenylate energy metabolism in rats: protective effect of a new protease inhibitor, E-3123. 751 90
Renal fusion or ectopia can present formidable challenges during aortic surgery. To evaluate morbidity and define optimal management, the clinical histories of 20 patients with renal fusion or ectopia who underwent 21 aortic procedures at the authors' institution over a 37-year period were reviewed. Indications for surgery included aortic aneurysm in 16 patients (infrarenal in 15 and thoracoabdominal in one) and aortoiliac occlusive disease in five (with renovascular
hypertension
in two). The abnormal kidney was detected before surgery in 13 patients (65%) by excretory urography, arteriography, computed tomography, or ultrasonography. Arteriography revealed multiple and/or anomalous renal arteries in nine of 12 patients studied. At surgery, 15 patients (75%) were found to have multiple or anomalous renal arteries. Six required renal revascularization (reimplantation four, endarterectomy one, aortorenal bypass one). The renal symphysis was divided in two patients. There were no operative deaths. Six major complications included bleeding requiring reoperation, renal failure requiring short-term dialysis,
pancreatitis
, gastrointestinal bleeding, pneumonia and thrombophlebitis. Preoperative aortography is recommended in patients with renal fusion or ectopia because of the high incidence of associated renal artery anomalies. The surgeon must be prepared to preserve or revascularize these anomalous renal arteries. Division of the renal symphysis is rarely required. Although perioperative morbidity is raised, aortic reconstruction in patients with renal fusion or ectopia can be safely performed without increased mortality.
...
PMID:Renal artery anomalies in patients with horseshoe or ectopic kidneys: the challenge of aortic reconstruction. 758 97
The effects of single and repeated short-term (4 hr) obstruction of pancreaticobiliary duct (PBDO), with or without exocrine stimulation (intraductal
hypertension
) by cerulein infusion (0.2 micrograms/kg.hr), on the exocrine pancreas were evaluated in the rat. Single blockage of pancreaticobiliary duct for 4 hr caused a significant rise in serum amylase levels, pancreatic water content, and redistribution of lysosomal enzyme, cathepsin B from the lysosomal fraction to the zymogen fraction, which was considered to mean the colocalization of lysosomal enzymes with pancreatic digestive enzymes in the same subcellular compartment in acinar cells. In addition, the accelerated lysosomal and mitochondrial fragility was observed in the single pancreaticobiliary-duct-obstructed animals. Moreover, the repeated PBDO for 4 hr (2 hr in each obstruction and 1 hr of free flowing of pancreaticobiliary juice between two obstructions) caused more marked changes in almost the all parameters, and the repeated PBDO with intraductal
hypertension
caused an activation of trypsinogen in the pancreas, making more marked changes in almost the all parameters than the repeated PBDO only group. These results indicate that the present model of repeated PBDO with exocrine stimulation seems to be a pertinent model for gallstone
pancreatitis
in humans, and that redistribution of lysosomal enzymes and subcellular organellar fragility seem to play an important role in the pathogenesis of pancreatic injuries induced by PBDO, particularly by repeated PBDO with exocrine stimulation, probably via activation of trypsinogen to trypsin by lysosomal enzyme, cathepsin B.
...
PMID:A possible mechanism for gallstone pancreatitis: repeated short-term pancreaticobiliary duct obstruction with exocrine stimulation in rats. 767 5
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