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Query: UMLS:C0030305 (
pancreatitis
)
16,014
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Among the patients with acute cholecystitis, those at the age of 20-45 years account for 12.6%. Of them, 50.9% develop complications: choledocholithiasis,
obstructive jaundice
, cholangitis,
pancreatitis
etc. The main method for treatment of the patients is the operation within 24-48 hr from the moment of their admission with intraoperative diagnosis of pathology of the extrahepatic bile ducts. There were no lethality, postoperative complications were noted in 9.3% of the patients.
...
PMID:[Diagnosis, surgical treatment procedure and results in acute cholecystitis in young patients]. 259 7
We report a case of a patient who developed an intramural duodenal hematoma after an endoscopic biopsy which caused obstruction of the duodenum with
obstructive jaundice
and
pancreatitis
. We speculate the limited mobility of the duodenum and its rich submucosal vascular plexus were the crucial factors.
...
PMID:Intramural duodenal hematoma following upper gastrointestinal endoscopic biopsy. 264 13
Surgery for
obstructive jaundice
is being challenged by endoscopic and percutaneous techniques. To compare their safety and efficacy, the courses of 157 patients treated for biliary obstruction were examined. Outcome was judged by mortality, complications, and need for further intervention. Forty-eight patients underwent endoscopic papillotomy (43 [90%] had stone disease) with two deaths and 11 cases of (23% incidence) of cholangitis.
Pancreatitis
developed in 9 (19%). Twenty-seven patients (56%) required further endoscopic, percutaneous, or surgical intervention. Sixty-five patients underwent transhepatic drainage (58 [89%] had malignant neoplasms) with a 28% (n = 18) mortality rate. Cholangitis developed in 26 (40%), and 50 (77%) required further transhepatic or surgical intervention. Forty-four patients underwent surgery (22 [50%] had stone disease and 12 [27%] had malignant neoplasms) with a 4.5% (n = 2) mortality rate. Cholangitis developed in 3 (7%),
pancreatitis
developed in 2 (4.5%), and bleeding developed in 1 (2%). Eight (18%) required further intervention. While endoscopic papillotomy provides efficacious treatment for stone disease, surgery provides a more expeditious, less morbid relief for malignant obstruction.
...
PMID:Management of biliary obstruction. A comparison of percutaneous, endoscopic, and operative techniques. 265 78
We describe an ultrasonographic "common channel" sign as the characteristic sonographic feature of malignant distal common bile duct (CBD) obstruction. Of 24 patients with
obstructive jaundice
due to distal CBD obstruction (pancreatic carcinoma 8, periampullary cancer 5, choledocholethiasis 10, CBD stricture due to
pancreatitis
1) in whom the final diagnosis was proven at laparotomy, ultrasonography revealed 11 patients to have a thin-walled distended gallbladder continuous with a dilated CBD, which was termed the "common channel" sign. In all 11 patients, the cause of obstruction of the lower end of CBD proved to be malignant (pancreatic carcinoma 6, periampullary 5). In contrast, only 2 of the other 13 patients with
obstructive jaundice
with distal CBD obstruction, but without the "common channel" sign, had a malignant lesion at the lower end of CBD. The positive and the negative predictive values of the common channel sign were 100% and 85%, respectively. Thus, the ultrasonographic common channel sign is a reliable and characteristic feature of distal CBD obstruction due to malignant pathology.
...
PMID:The ultrasonographic "common channel" sign: a characteristic feature of malignant obstruction of the lower end of common bile duct. 266 63
Experience in the treatment of 238 patients for nontumorous lesions of the biliary tract by choledochotomy is generalized. Choledochotomy was performed in
obstructive jaundice
during the operation, in cholangiolithiasis, suppurative cholangitis, strictures of the terminal part of the choledochus, and indurative
pancreatitis
which were attended by biliary hypertension. Diagnostic choledochotomy was undertaken only in 5.8% of patients. Twenty-two (9.2%) patients died after choledochotomy. The method of completing choledochotomy was chosen individually according to the character of the pathological changes in the bile ducts and the acuteness of the inflammatory process. Choledochotomy was completed by external drainage of the common bile duct in 116 patients, by complete suturing of the choledochus in 19, by creation of bile-draining anastomoses in 89, and by papillosphincterotomy in 14 patients. Terminal and lateral choledochoduodenoanastomosis was formed in 25 patients, with good immediate results. Mortality was highest after papillosphincterotomy and external drainage of the choledochus.
...
PMID:[Indications for choledochotomy and methods for its performance]. 267 5
Thirty-two consecutive patients with impacted ampullary or distal common bile duct stones were managed prospectively. Preoperative indications for surgery were
obstructive jaundice
in 13 patients (40.6%), acute cholangitis in 7 patients (21.9%), biliary
pancreatitis
in 6 patients (18.8%), acute cholecystitis in 5 patients (15.6%), and chronic cholecystitis in 1 patient (3.1%). No patient had a prior cholecystectomy, and all stones were removed retrograde during cholecystectomy and open-duct exploration. There were no deaths, one retained stone in the biliary radicals, two episodes of mild
pancreatitis
, one superficial wound infection, and one minor bile leak. All patients have done well on follow-up. This study demonstrated that impacted biliary stones can be consistently and successfully extracted by the supraduodenal approach with minimal morbidity and no mortality, without resorting to duodenotomy and sphincter ablation.
...
PMID:The surgical management of impacted common bile duct stones without sphincter ablation. 267 92
The authors report a case of fatal leptospirosis due to Leptospira icterohaemorrhagiae revealed by typical signs of acute cholecystitis and associated with
pancreatitis
in a 73 year old patient presenting with gallstones. The initial clinical findings were highly suggestive of severe but typical cholecystitis and the final diagnosis was only considered when the patient's condition worsened despite surgery, with increasing
obstructive jaundice
and multiple organ failure.
Pancreatitis
was an autopsy finding. Misleading, especially gastrointestinal symptoms are frequent in leptospirosis. Hence an early diagnosis is an essential condition for a successful antibiotic management in severe cases of leptospirosis. This possibility should be considered whenever a patient presents with infectious
obstructive jaundice
. The patient has to be questioned concerning possible contact with contaminated animals and, when in doubt, the presence of specific antibodies should be investigated.
...
PMID:[Leptospirosis caused by Leptospira icterohaemorrhagiae of the pseudo-surgical type: a case]. 271 6
Chronic pancreatitis is a rare childhood illness, most often presenting with nausea, vomiting, and recurrent abdominal pain.
Obstructive jaundice
secondary to biliary stricture is an uncommon manifestation of childhood
pancreatitis
, with only 11 patients previously described in the surgical literature. We report our experience with two additional children with jaundice secondary to
pancreatitis
and review the literature on this problem. Laboratory tests are often of little diagnostic value, and a high index of suspicion is essential for correct diagnosis. Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography is emerging as an extremely useful diagnostic study in these patients. The surgical management of this uncommon pediatric illness remains controversial.
...
PMID:Obstructive jaundice secondary to chronic pancreatitis in children: report of two cases and review of the literature. 305 95
We report on a patient with a carcinoid tumour of the ampulla of Vater and review the 33 known cases of the literature with regard to clinical presentation, morphology and therapy. As it is apparent from the location of the tumour,
obstructive jaundice
,
pancreatitis
and nonspecific upper abdominal complaints are the most frequent symptoms. The ampullary carcinoid belongs histogenetically to the APUD cell system with the ability of multiple endocrine activity. The expression of somatostatin peptide and neuron-specific enolase are the most common histopathological findings. A systemic function of these hormones, however, has not yet been shown. For diagnostic purposes in surgical pathology we found synaptophysin and chromogranin A to be important markers. For surgical treatment, partial duodenopancreatectomy remains the current therapy of choise, if the tumour exceeds two centimeters in diameter.
...
PMID:[Carcinoid tumor of the ampulla of Vater. Morphology, diagnosis and therapy of a rare papilla tumor]. 305 8
Idiopathic fibrosing
pancreatitis
is a chronic process of unknown etiology characterized by extensive infiltration of the pancreatic parenchyma by fibrous tissue. This disease process is uncommon in the pediatric patient and is consequently rarely considered in the differential diagnosis of abdominal pain and jaundice in the child. The sonographic demonstration of a dilated biliary tree and common bile duct compressed by an enlarged pancreas may be the first suggestion of this entity. Two patients with idiopathic fibrosing
pancreatitis
and
obstructive jaundice
are reported with a review of the clinical, radiographic, and pathologic findings.
...
PMID:Idiopathic fibrosing pancreatitis: a cause of obstructive jaundice in childhood. 327 37
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