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Query: UMLS:C0030305 (pancreatitis)
16,014 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Inflammation of the pancreas (pancreatitis) has many presentations in children and adolescents, ranging from intrauterine congenital onset with sequelae of early exocrine pancreatic insufficiency as in the diseases of cystic fibrosis and Shwachman-Diamond syndrome to postnatal onset as a consequence of embryologic anomalies affecting pancreatic drainage postulated to exist in pancreas divisum, or of traumatic, obstructive, hemodynamic, metabolic or biochemical insults. The etiology is often elusive with up to 30% of cases being idiopathic. Modern imaging modalities of endoscopic ultrasonography and magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography extend the diagnostic power of conventional abdominal ultrasonography and computed tomography. In addition, there is increasing pediatric experience with endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography. Medical management remains supportive, with optimal timing and indications for surgery in cases of pancreatic necrosis and pseudocyst assessed. Three temporal patterns of pancreatitis appear in children: acute pancreatitis, recurrent acute pancreatitis, and chronic pancreatitis. Acute pancreatitis is of abrupt onset, often attributable to a specific cause, and of variable severity and duration but self-limited with eventual resolution. Acute attacks of pancreatitis recurring after periods of remission characterize acute recurrent pancreatitis and indicate an intrinsic problem or susceptibility. Chronic pancreatitis is present in most of these cases in which pancreatic inflammation and destruction never completely remits.
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PMID:Pancreatitis: etiology, diagnosis, and management. 1180 91

The radioimmunoassay (RIA) for trypsin-like immunoreactivity (TLI) is one of the most sensitive and specific tests for detecting exocrine pancreatic insufficiency (EPI). An abnormally low serum TLI concentration (<2.5 ng/ml) indicates end-stage EPI. Although RIA methods can be used to detect canine serum TLI, these procedures are beyond the capabilities of most veterinary clinics and general laboratories. Using monoclonal antibodies (mAbs), we developed an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for canine TLI and incorporated it into an immunochromatographic test (ICT) for the diagnosis of EPI. The ELISA was linear over TLI concentrations of 1-100 ng/ml. Levels of intra-assay coefficients of variance (CVs) were 1.8-6.1%, inter-assay CVs were 5.1-9.8%, and the recovery of TLI added to two samples of canine serum ranged from 89 to 111 and 93 to 108%, respectively. Good correlation (correlation coefficient, 0.974) occurred between the TLI values obtained by the ELISA method and those by RIA from 56 clinical samples. Serum TLI values in clinically healthy dogs ranged from 7.8 to 29.2 ng/ml by ELISA, and those from dogs with EPI were 0.0-0.6 ng/ml. The values were 0.0-287.4 ng/ml for dogs with pancreatitis, and those from dogs with gastrointestinal disease were 5.5-58.9 ng/ml. The only statistically significant difference (P<0.01) occurred between the TLI level of healthy dogs and those with EPI. The ICT kit showed high reproducibility, and the TLI values yielding negative results differed significantly (P<0.01) from those returning positive results. The ICT kit yielded negative results (indicating EPI) from clinical serum samples with TLI concentrations of 0.0-4.1 ng/ml by ELISA. Both the ELISA and ICT kit are useful tools in the diagnosis of canine EPI.
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PMID:Development of a canine trypsin-like immunoreactivity assay system using monoclonal antibodies. 1205 41

Although the three leading symptoms of chronic pancreatitis, pain, exocrine and endocrine pancreatic insufficiency, are well known, only a few long-term studies have correlated these symptoms with the natural course of the disease. Besides these symptoms, numerous pancreatic complications and/or pancreatitis-associated diseases may affect the course and determine the prognosis of chronic pancreatitis. Their influence, however, has not been studied in detail. This review has two major aims: The first one is to give an up-to-date survey of present knowledge on the natural course of the disease with a view to the leading symptoms under special consideration of how the duration of the disease, continual alcohol abuse as well as endoscopic procedures and surgical treatment affect pain. Included is also what is known about chronic pancreatitis as a precondition of pancreatic and extrapancreatic carcinoma. The effect of chronic pancreatitis on the socio-economic status of patients is discussed and the mortality rate of the disease. The second aim of this review is to stimulate pancreatologists from different centers to consolidate resources in order to perform larger controlled studies than any one single center can undertake and work out common criteria for the diagnosis of chronic pancreatitis and follow-up of its course.
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PMID:Natural course of chronic pancreatitis. 1212 Feb 64

Chronic pancreatitis is a well-defined disease on histopathological grounds, but for clinical purposes diagnosis is generally not based on histological specimens. Imaging procedures, non-invasive or with different degrees of invasiveness, and pancreatic function tests are therefore the diagnostic mainstay in patients with suggestive clinical history. The correct diagnosis of chronic pancreatitis is easy in late stages but difficult in an early stage of the disease. A particular challenge is the differentiation between acute or recurrent acute and early chronic pancreatitis. Earlier classifications (Cambridge and Marseille) did not consider the complex interrelationship between (especially alcoholic) acute and chronic pancreatitis. A possible solution is to separate the entities into probable and definite alcoholic chronic pancreatitis, with the assignment into the latter category achieved by follow-up investigations. Up to now the best diagnostic accuracy at an early stage is achieved by the detection of abnormalities of the ductal system in endoscopic retrograde pancreatography or by assessing exocrine function with the secretin-ceruletide test. The endoscopic ultrasound may substitute the endoscopic retrograde pancreatography as superior imaging modality that detects both parenchymal and ductal changes of chronic pancreatitis at an early stage. Magnetic resonance pancreatography is a further promising diagnostic tool without the risk of pancreatitis after endoscopic retrograde pancreatography, but imaging of the side branches, which is crucial for detection of early chronic pancreatitis, is not yet sufficient. Faecal elastase is a progress in non-invasive testing of exocrine pancreatic function, but its value for the diagnosis of chronic pancreatitis under conditions of clinical practice is limited. Several (13)C breath tests have been developed, but their availability and their diagnostic accuracy in chronic pancreatitis is still limited. Light to moderate exocrine pancreatic insufficiency is not detectable with adequate accuracy by tubeless function tests. A specific serum marker of pancreatic fibrosis which would reliably indicate the presence of chronic pancreatitis or its progression to is not available.
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PMID:Modern diagnostics of chronic pancreatitis. 1235 12

A 73-year-old male was worked up for persistent abdominal pain and found to have a 2.5 cm cystic lesion of the neck of the pancreas. At celiotomy the lesion was felt to be a benign cystic lesion and a central pancreatectomy consisting of removal of the lesion with one centimeter of pancreas on either side was performed. The proximal pancreatic duct was oversewn and the distal body and tail of the pancreas was drained into a Roux-en-Y limb of the jejunum. At present, there are 70 cases of central pancreatectomy published in the literature. Mortality of the operation is zero and the major complications of pancreatic fistula, delayed gastric emptying, pancreatitis and abscess, are all temporary and self limiting. Central pancreatectomy affords the opportunity to save normal pancreatic tissue thus avoiding the complications of exocrine pancreatic insufficiency, namely steatorrhea and endocrine pancreatic insufficiency namely diabetes.
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PMID:Central (middle segment) pancreatectomy: a suitable operation for small lesions of the neck of the pancreas. 1239 73

Chronic pancreatitis is a common cause of exocrine pancreatic insufficiency (EPI) in humans and cats but is rarely recognised in dogs in which pancreatic acinar atrophy (PAA) is reportedly more common. This paper describes four dogs which developed EPI secondary to pancreatitis. Two of the dogs also had diabetes mellitus which developed before EPI. One diabetic dog had concurrent hyperadrenocorticism and was euthanased five months after presentation; the other diabetic dog died 48 months after diagnosis. The remaining dogs were alive 78 and 57 months after diagnosis. The number of affected dogs was comparable to the number of cases of presumed PAA seen over the same time period in the same institution. Chronic pancreatitis may be a more common cause of EPI in dogs than previously assumed and may be under-recognised because of difficulties in diagnosis. The relative importance of chronic pancreatitis as a cause of canine diabetes mellitus remains to be ascertained.
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PMID:Exocrine pancreatic insufficiency as an end stage of pancreatitis in four dogs. 1286 28

Pancreatic acinar atrophy (PAA) is by far the most common cause for the maldigestion signs of canine exocrine pancreatic insufficiency (EPI). The ability to diagnose PAA in the subclinical phase before the development of total acinar atrophy and manifestation of clinical signs has offered new possibilities to study the pathogenesis of the disease. Marked T-lymphocyte infiltration during the progression of acinar atrophy and the genetic susceptibility of the disease have been taken as a primary evidence of the autoimmune nature of the disease. The term autoimmune-mediated atrophic lymphocytic pancreatitis is preferred to describe pathologic findings. A single abnormally, low serum canine trypsin-like immunoreactivity (cTLI) concentration (< 2.5 mg/L), in dogs with typical maldigestion signs has been shown to be highly diagnostic for clinical EPI and is found in dogs with end-stage PAA. Repeatedly subnormal cTLI values (2.5-5.0 micrograms/L) in dogs with no clinical signs of EPI are valuable markers of subclinical EPI and highly suggestive for partial PAA. The primary treatment of EPI is supplementing each meal with pancreatic enzymes. The long-term treatment response for the nonenteric-coated enzyme supplements has been found to be good in half of these dogs, but the response varied considerably.
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PMID:Exocrine pancreatic insufficiency in dogs. 1455 66

Patients with normal or borderline sweat tests present a diagnostic challenge. In spite of the availability of genetic analysis and measurement of nasal potential difference, there is still uncertainty in diagnosing cystic fibrosis in some patients. CA 19-9 is a tumor-associated antigen whose levels were previously found to be elevated in some cystic fibrosis patients. We investigated whether serum CA 19-9 levels can contribute to establishing the diagnosis of cystic fibrosis in patients with a borderline sweat test, and evaluated the influence of different clinical variables on CA 19-9 levels. Serum CA 19-9 levels were measured in 82 cystic fibrosis patients grouped according to their genotype and in 38 healthy individuals. Group A included 50 patients who carried two mutations previously found to be associated with a pathological sweat test and pancreatic insufficiency (DeltaF508, W1282X, G542X, N1303K, and S549R). Group B included 13 compound heterozygote cystic fibrosis patients who carried one mutation known to cause mild disease with a borderline or normal sweat test and pancreatic sufficiency (3849+10kb C-->T, 5T). Group C included 38 normal controls. Nineteen cystic fibrosis patients carried at least one unidentified mutation. An association between CA 19-9 levels and age, pulmonary function, pancreatic status, sweat chloride, previous pancreatitis, serum lipase, meconium ileus, distal intestinal obstruction, liver disease, and diabetes was investigated. The distribution of CA 19-9 levels was significantly different between the three groups ( p<0.01); high CA 19-9 levels were found in 60% (30/50) of group Apatients and in 46.6% (6/13) of group B patients, but in only 5.2% (2/38) of the controls. CA 19-9 levels were inversely related to forced expiratory volume in 1 s, while no association was found with the other clinical parameters examined. Our findings suggest that the serum CA 19-9 in cystic fibrosis patients originates in the respiratory system, and has a useful ancillary role, particularly when diagnostic uncertainty exists. Hence, the diagnosis of cystic fibrosis should be considered in patients with borderline sweat tests and high CA 19-9 levels, but normal levels do not exclude cystic fibrosis.
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PMID:Serum CA 19-9 levels as a diagnostic marker in cystic fibrosis patients with borderline sweat tests. 1459 87

A 33 year old female was admitted to the hospital to study aedema and bocio, A nephrotic syndrome was diagnosed and the renal biopsy demonstrated membranous glomerulonephritis, stage II. She was also diagnosed of Hashimoto's autoinmmune thyroiditis: TSH (41.5 uUl/ml), T4 (0.07 ng/dl), antithyroglobuline (1/2560) and antimicrosome (1/6400). Four year latter she was diagnosed of autoinmmune pancreatitis, without evidence of diabetes mellitus or exocrine pancreatic insufficiency. Eight years latter she was diagnosed of primary autoimmune suprarrenal insufficiency: basal cortisol: 2.7 mcg/dl, post ACTH estimulated cortisol: 5.6 mcg/dl, antinuclear antibody (1/160) and antiparietal (1/320). We present a pluriglandular autoimmune syndrome with membranous glomerulonephritis, thyroiditis, pancreatitis and suprarrenal insufficiency. To the best of our knowledge this complex syndrome has not been previously described.
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PMID:[Membranous nephropathy associated to autoimmune thyroiditis, chronic pancreatitis and suprarrenal insufficiency]. 1545

The purpose of this manuscript is to provide an overview of the normal development of the pancreas as well as pancreatic pathology in children. Diagnostic imaging plays a major role in the evaluation of the pancreas in infants and children. Familiarity with the range of normal appearance and the diseases that commonly affect this gland is important for the accurate and timely diagnosis of pancreatic disorders in the pediatric population. Normal embryology is discussed, as are the most common congenital anomalies that occur as a result of aberrant development during embryology. These include pancreas divisum, annular pancreas, agenesis of the dorsal pancreatic anlagen and ectopic pancreatic tissue. Syndromes that can manifest pancreatic pathology include: Beckwith Wiedemann syndrome, von Hippel-Lindau disease and autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease. Children and adults with cystic fibrosis and Shwachman-Diamond syndrome frequently present with pancreatic insufficiency. Trauma is the most common cause of pancreatitis in children. In younger children, unexplained pancreatic injury must always alert the radiologist to potential child abuse. Pancreatic pseudocysts are a complication of trauma, but can also be seen in the setting of acute or chronic pancreatitis from other causes. Primary pancreatic neoplasms are rare in children and are divided into exocrine tumors such as pancreatoblastoma and adenocarcinoma and into endocrine or islet cell tumors. Islet cell tumors are classified as functioning (insulinoma, gastrinoma, VIPoma and glucagonoma) and nonfunctioning tumors. Solid-cystic papillary tumor is probably the most common pancreatic tumor in Asian children. Although quite rare, secondary tumors of the pancreas can be associated with certain primary malignancies.
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PMID:Disorders of the pediatric pancreas: imaging features. 1553 62


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