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Query: UMLS:C0030305 (
pancreatitis
)
16,014
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Previously published studies of the pathology of canine exocrine
pancreatic insufficiency
(EPI) have been based on morphological findings during the clinical phase of the disease, when atrophy of acinar parenchyma occurs. Recently, low serum trypsinlike immunoreactivity (TLI) concentration has been shown to precede clinical signs, making it possible to diagnose EPI prior to onset of the clinical disease. This study presents histological and ultrastructural findings of pancreatic biopsies from 11 German Shepherd Dogs and 2 Rough-coated Collies with subclinical EPI (SEPI). These findings were compared with those from dogs with clinical EPI (n = 11) and healthy control dogs (n = 5). Biopsied tissue from dogs with SEPI typically contained both normal and atrophied acinar parenchyma. The most significant finding was the marked lymphocytic infiltration, which was most prevalent at the border zone of affected and nonaffected parenchyma but had spread into the normal acinar tissue. Numerous intraacinar lymphocytes were found. Most of the lymphocytes were positive by immunostaining for CD3. In more advanced stages of destruction, the findings were characteristic of pancreatic acinar atrophy. In the atrophied parenchyma, the inflammatory reaction, if present, was less prominent. Ultrastructural changes were in accordance with those of the histological study showing infiltration of lymphocytes both in affected acini and in acini that revealed no obvious ultrastructural changes. Progressive degenerative changes of acinar cells were considered a nonspecific finding. Apoptotic death of acinar cells was occasionally found. The inflammatory reaction was clearly shown to precede the pancreatic acinar atrophy, and the findings suggested that lymphocytic
pancreatitis
leads to atrophy of the pancreas. The possibility that EPI is an immune-mediated disease in German Shepherd Dogs and Rough-coated Collies is discussed.
...
PMID:Exocrine pancreatic atrophy in German Shepherd Dogs and Rough-coated Collies: an end result of lymphocytic pancreatitis. 1056 34
Cholecystokinin (CCK) is a major gastrointestinal hormone that plays an important role in stimulation of pancreatic secretion and gall-bladder contraction, regulation of gastrointestinal motility and induction of satiety. Ingestion of fat and protein induces significant increases in plasma CCK. Intraluminal mediators of CCK secretion, luminal CCK releasing factor and diazepam-binding inhibitor, were purified from rat intestinal secretion. These CCK-releasing factors (RF) are secreted tonically by the small intestine and stimulate CCK release. Another kind of CCK-RF named 'monitor peptide' was purified from the rat pancreatic juice that stimulates CCK secretion when introduced into rat intestine. Bile exclusion from the duodenum causes an increase in basal CCK and enhances stimulated plasma CCK release, and bile salt replacement reverses these effects. Thus, the CCK-RF are spontaneously secreted into the intestinal lumen in humans, while the CCK-producing cells are under constant suppression by intraduodenal bile acids. In acute pancreatitis, plasma CCK levels are high in patients with gallstone
pancreatitis
, but not in patients with
pancreatitis
from other causes, such as alcoholic and idiopathic
pancreatitis
. A transient disturbance of bile flow into the duodenum by stones or oedema of the pancreas together with impairment of pancreatic exocrine function might cause the increase in plasma CCK release in gallstone
pancreatitis
. Patients with chronic pancreatitis with mild to moderate impairment of exocrine function and abdominal pain, had significantly higher plasma CCK concentrations, whereas patients with
pancreatic insufficiency
had a significantly lower plasma CCK response to a test meal than the healthy subjects. The increased CCK may further aggravate
pancreatitis
and worsen the prognosis of
pancreatitis
by stimulating the injured pancreas, resulting in the vicious circle via endogenous CCK release. The CCK-A receptor antagonist might be therapeutically useful in acute pancreatitis by stopping the vicious circle.
...
PMID:Pathophysiological role of cholecystokinin in humans. 1075 24
Chronic pancreatitis is a dynamic disease characterized on one side by a progressive destruction of the pancreatic parenchyma and change in the architecture of the gland and on the other by the impairment of its function. Diagnosis of chronic pancreatitis may be a quite easy or a very difficult attempt according to the severity and evolutive stage of disease. In fact, while most patients presents with a typical history of alcohol abuse, recurrent abdominal pain and steatorrhea, in the late stage of disease it is not rare to see patients with symptoms and signs which may be not typical for
pancreatitis
. A large number of morphological and functional methods has been developed to allow an easy and early diagnosis of disease. However, while in the advanced stages of disease, where
pancreatic insufficiency
, calcifications, or pseudocysts are present, diagnosis is easy and most of the procedures show high sensitivity and specificity, in the early disease the degree of pancreatic dysfunction and structural change are too small to be detected by current methods. The present article aims to evaluate the different morphological and functional methods with their advantages and shortcomings, as well as to establish their role in the diagnostic assessment of chronic pancreatitis.
...
PMID:Chronic pancreatitis: diagnosis and staging. 1082 20
This article reviews the literature and gives an overview on prevalence and possible explanations for pancreatic involvement in inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD). IBD patients have a markedly elevated risk for developing acute pancreatitis as well as
pancreatic insufficiency
. Multiple potential causes for
pancreatitis
in IBD patients exist. In the majority of cases acute pancreatitis appears to be related to drug side effects or local structural complications rather than a true extraintestinal manifestation of IBD. Nevertheless, some cases of acute pancreatitis remain unexplained. Prevalence of chronic pancreatitis in IBD patients also seems to be relatively high. However, etiology of pancreatic duct changes and/or the occurrence of exocrine insufficiency remain unclear. In most cases chronic pancreatitis is clinically unapparent, although in some patients it may be accompanied by clinically relevant exocrine insufficiency.
...
PMID:The pancreas and inflammatory bowel diseases. 1095 99
The most common cause for the clinical signs of exocrine
pancreatic insufficiency
(EPI) in dogs is pancreatic acinar atrophy (PAA). In the subclinical phase of EPI, before total atrophy occurs, exocrine pancreas is affected by infiltrative lymphocytic inflammation, which gradually leads to selective destruction and atrophy of the acinar tissue.Here, we analyzed the role of cell-mediated and humoral immune mechanisms in the pathogenesis of atrophic lymphocytic
pancreatitis
in German shepherd dogs and rough-coated collies. Pancreas biopsies and serum samples were obtained from 12 dogs with subclinical EPI (SEPI), 13 dogs with clinical EPI and 13 healthy control dogs. Immunohistochemical analysis showed that, in the subclinical phase, the majority of the infiltrating lymphocytes were T-cells with an almost equal number of CD4+ 'T-helper' and CD8+ 'cytotoxic' T-lymphocytes. The distribution of the two lymphocyte subsets was different. Typically, the CD4+ cells were present in large cellular infiltrates in the affected parenchyma, and the scattered CD8+ cells had infiltrated both the affected and the normal parenchyma. In sections where destruction of acinar parenchyma was present, the CD8+ T-cells were predominant. In cases of marked T-cell infiltration, CD79+ B-lymphocytes and plasma cells, and lysozyme-positive macrophages were also detected. Lymphoid follicle germinal centers with a majority of cells staining positively for CD79 were found. The lymphocytic infiltration in the totally atrophic tissue of dogs with clinical EPI was less prominent. Indirect immunofluorescence staining showed serum antibodies reacting weakly with pancreatic acinar cells in five out of nine dogs with subclinical and three out of 10 dogs with clinical EPI, but not in the control dogs. The results suggest that the tissue destruction is largely T-cell-mediated, although the presence of numerous B-lymphocytes and pancreas-specific antibodies in the sera of some dogs indicate that humoral mechanisms are also involved. In conclusion, this study suggests that the atrophic lymphocytic
pancreatitis
in German shepherds and rough-coated collies is an autoimmune disease.
...
PMID:Cellular and humoral immune responses in atrophic lymphocytic pancreatitis in German shepherd dogs and rough-coated collies. 1097 89
We report on a 33-year-old patient from Sri Lanka who had been suffering from recurrent episodes of abdominal cramps since he was ten years old. He additionally suffered from postprandial flatulence and an increased frequency of bowel movements. By the age of 24, his condition had worsened with polyuria and polydipsia and he was diagnosed with type II diabetes mellitus. Recently, the patient's compliance deteriorated steadily and his diabetes mellitus was uncontrolled. His flatulence continued and he had six to seven bowel movements daily. He presented to us with renewed bouts of severe stomach cramps, similar to the painful episodes that the patient experienced in his youth. After exclusion of other etiologies and judging by the clinical picture, the patient's origin and the sonographically and radiologically verified pancreatic calcification, we rendered the diagnosis of a tropic calcifying
pancreatitis
with secondary diabetes mellitus. According to the literature, malignant neoplasia may develop on the basis of this disease. However, we were able to rule out a carcinoma as the cause of the current pain episodes in this patient based on clinical findings and course. We attributed the stomach cramps to compression of the common bile duct by the fibrotic head of pancreas. Pain and cholestasis regressed, thus obviating the need for surgical intervention (pancreaticojejunostomy). On therapy with enzyme substitution and insulin, the patient's exo- and endocrine
pancreatic insufficiency
was asymptomatic.
...
PMID:[Chronic abdominal pain in a young diabetic patient]. 1111 10
We describe a case of chronic idiopathic
pancreatitis
associated with ulcerative colitis.
Pancreatitis
is a rare extra-intestinal manifestations of inflammatory bowel disease. Chronic idiopathic
pancreatitis
associated with ulcerative colitis are usually painless, without calcification, with stricture of the main pancreatic duct and with severe exocrine
pancreatic insufficiency
.
...
PMID:[Idiopathic chronic pancreatitis (with diffuse stenosis of Wirsung's duct) in ulcerative colitis]. 1122 53
Idiopathic fibrosing
pancreatitis
(IFP) is a rare cause of obstructive jaundice in children. The obstruction is caused by circumferential compression of the intrapancreatic portion of the common bile duct (CBD). Various forms of biliary decompression, including surgical sphincteroplasty, choledochoduodenostomy, and Roux-en-Y choledochojejunostomy are employed as a treatment. We report a 14-year-old boy with IFP who was successfully treated by a temporary drainage of compressed CBD with the help of a stent placed by endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP). The diagnosis of IFP was confirmed histologically after open surgery. The patient remains well after 3.5 years of follow-up with no evidence of
pancreatic insufficiency
. This report offers an additional case of IFP causing obstructive jaundice treated by temporary internal drainage of CBD, which is safer and less invasive than biliodigestive surgical decompression.
...
PMID:Idiopathic fibrosing pancreatitis presenting with obstructive jaundice in a child. 1171 72
Cystic fibrosis is a genetic disease that is associated with abnormal sweat electrolytes, sino-pulmonary disease, exocrine
pancreatic insufficiency
, and male infertility. Insights into genotype/phenotype relations have recently been gained in this disorder. The strongest relationship exists between 'severe' mutations in the gene that encodes the cystic fibrosis transmembrane regulator (CFTR) and
pancreatic insufficiency
. The relationship between 'mild' mutations, associated with residual CFTR function, and expression of disease is less precise. Atypical 'mild' mutations in the CFTR gene have been linked to late-onset pulmonary disease, congenital bilateral absence of the vas deferens, and idiopathic
pancreatitis
. Less commonly, sinusitis, allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis, and possibly even asthma may also be associated with mutations in the CFTR gene, but those syndromes predominantly reflect non-CFTR gene modifiers and environmental influences.
...
PMID:'CFTR-opathies': disease phenotypes associated with cystic fibrosis transmembrane regulator gene mutations. 1173 31
Cystic fibrosis (CF) is an autosomal recessive disorder caused by mutations of the CFTR gene. The number of adult CF patients increased dramatically, since life expectancy is now around thirty years. CF is usually a pediatric disease. In adult patients the disease associate a diffuse bronchectasia with chronic colonisation of sputum with Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and
pancreatic insufficiency
. Mortality is usually related to respiratory insufficiency. One third of adult patients develop diabetes mellitus. A diagnosis of CF can be made in adult patients particularly when it exists male infertility with congenital absence of vas deferens, chronic sinusitis or diffuse bronchectasia or chronic pancreatitis, acute and recurrent
pancreatitis
, allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis. The diagnosis is established with positive sweat chloride concentration, or double CFTR mutations and/or other suggestive organ involvement.
...
PMID:[Cystic fibrosis in adulthood]. 1179 81
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