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

The authors report four cases of cardiovascular signs in pancreatitis in patients aged between 31 and 42 years. They then consider the main aspects observed. T-wave disorders, pericarditis, myocardial infarction and coronary heart disease and arterio-pancreatic syndrome. They consider the points in common between myocardial infarction and acute pancreatitis and then review the various pathogenic theories proposed.
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PMID:[Cardiovascular manifestations of pancreatitis. Apropos of 4 cases]. 17 85

Surgical procedures can be accomplished successfully in patients with uremia provided certain principles of perioperative management are observed. Preoperative dialysis minimizes the biochemical derangements and improves fluid balance, hypertension and hemostasis. Drug schedules are adjusted in consideration of abnormal metabolism in renal disease. Anesthetic management is modified in recognition of potentially adverse or altered activity of anesthetic agents and neuromuscular relaxants. The lightest plane of anesthesia consistent with expeditious operative technique is maintained, since adequate tissue oxygenation is dependent upon increased cardiac output in these invariably anemic patients. Intraoperative hyperventilation sustains the usual compensatory mechanism for uremic metabolic acidosis in the conscious patient, thereby averting increments in serum potassium levels associated with increasing acidosis. Postoperative morbidity may include shunt thrombosis, infection, impaired wound healing, bleeding, pericarditis, pleuritis and pancreatitis. Hypervolemia and hyperkalemia are best managed by early postoperative dialysis. A period of nutritional support using intravenous essential L-amino acids and hypertonic glucose appears promising, especially when gastrointestinal dysfunction exists.
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PMID:Renal failure and the surgeon. 40 28

This study was designed to assess the value of glucagon infusion in pigs with experimental pancreatitis. The condition was induced by injection of bile into the pancreatic duct directly after intravenous injection of secretion. Macroscopic haemorrpagic pancreatitis ensued immediately, and was accompanied by a rise in the serum amylase of five to ten times. An experimental group of 15 pigs was given glucagon by continous infusion for 18 hours beginning 18 hours after induction of pancreatitis. A control group was given intravenous saline. Fourteen of the 15 treated animals survived for 1 week and 3 died within 2 weeks, after which the remaining animals were sacrificed. Ten of the 15 controls died within the first week. Serum amylase levels in both groups began to decline when infusion was commenced, but levels in the treated group were significantly lower than in the controls. Autopsy showed prominent peripancreatic granulation tissue in the treated animals, a significant incidence of pericarditis in both groups and pancreatic pseudocysts in 3 controls and 1 treated animal. These results suggest that glucagon effectively reduced the mortality in pigs with experimental pancreatitis and that a controlled clinical trial of treatment is justified.
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PMID:A conrolled trial of glucagon in experimental pancreatitis. 95 66

Immunologic evaluation of a patient with pancreatitis, subcutaneous fat necrosis, pleuritis, pericarditis and synovitis is presented. The previously recognized syndrome of pancreatic disease, subcutaneous fat necrosis and arthritis is reviewed. Based on analysis of all the cases described in the English language literature it is suggested that this syndrome be expanded to include polyserositis rather than arthritis alone. Although experimental and clinical evidence tends to implicate physiocochemical tissue injury by pancreatic lipase as the primary pathogenic mechanism in this syndrome, studies in our patient suggest the possible contribution of immune-mediated injury. Supporting data include eosinophilia, biopsy demonstration of vasculitis antedating the subcutaneous fat necrosis, immunofluorescent identification of immunoglobulin G (IgG) and C3 in the pleura, and reduced levels of total hemolytic complement in the serum, and pleural and pericardial effusions.
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PMID:Syndrome and pancreatic disease, subcutaneous fat necrosis and polyserositis. Case report and review of literature. 109 Jan 61

Among 122 patients with chronic pancreatitis, marked eosinophilia (greater than 500 eosinophils/mm3 in the peripheral blood) was observed in 21 cases (17.2%). All of the affected patients were males, and there was no significant difference in the incidence of eosinophilia between patients with alcoholic and nonalcoholic pancreatitis. In the patients with eosinophilia, endocrine pancreatic function was maintained comparatively well, despite marked exocrine pancreatic dysfunction. The eosinophilia of chronic pancreatitis frequently developed in association with severe damage to neighboring organs (pleural effusion, pericarditis, and ascites), as well as in association with pancreatic pseudocyst. Our findings suggest that there is a close correlation between marked eosinophilia and severe tissue injury during acute exacerbations of chronic pancreatitis.
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PMID:Eosinophilia associated with chronic pancreatitis: an analysis of 122 patients with definite chronic pancreatitis. 137 90

Purulent pericarditis is an infrequent complication of infections originating in another body location. Symptoms and signs are often absent; a high index of awareness is required for its diagnosis. A patient recovering from extensive necrotic-hemorrhagic pancreatitis presented with tamponade due to methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) purulent pericarditis, further complicated by MRSA endocarditis. Treatment included pericardectomy, IV vancomycin and teicoplanin.
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PMID:Purulent pericarditis due to methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus. A case report. 183 57

Ascites and pleural effusions may complicate pancreatitis but pericarditis with pericardial effusion and tamponade is rare and necrosis of mediastinal fat has not been described before. All these complications occurred in the case reported here.
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PMID:Rare intrathoracic complications in acute pancreatitis. 206 4

Spontaneous perforation of the esophagus (Boerhaave syndrome) is an emergency that requires early diagnosis if death or serious prolonged illness is to be averted. The cases of three patients with spontaneous esophageal perforation simulating other primary diagnoses are described. The respective referral diagnoses were pericarditis, lung abscess, and pancreatitis. Each case was characterized by severe illness, and by delay in diagnosis despite multiple consultations. Two patients died. The literature is reviewed and the causes of delay in diagnosis are analyzed. More than 40 years after the first report of successful surgical repair, spontaneous esophageal perforation is insufficiently considered in diagnostic hypotheses, yet may be confirmed or excluded by simple methods. All clinicians need to be alert to this lethal disease, and to be aware of its frequent atypical presentations.
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PMID:Boerhaave revisited: spontaneous esophageal perforation as a diagnostic masquerader. 265 30

A 33-year old Caucasian woman with SLE, who had been treated with chloroquine and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs for one year, suddenly presented with a rapidly progressive exacerbation of SLE featuring fever, arthritis, cutaneous manifestations, cerebral dysfunction, pleuritis, pericarditis and pancreatitis. Clinical deterioration and a rise in the serum amylase occurred during a month of high dose prednisone treatment. Plasmapheresis, while maintaining prednisone at a constant dosage, resulted in a complete remission of all symptoms within four weeks. Plasmapheresis was discontinued and improvement was maintained whilst tapering off prednisone and adding azathioprine.
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PMID:Acute pancreatitis in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). Successful treatment with plasmapheresis after failure of prednisone. 668 Nov 51

Systemic pathological alterations were studied in thirty-seven autopsied patients with Kawasaki disease. Systemic vasculitis was the most characteristic pathological finding and was present in all the patients. In addition to the vasculitis, there was a high incidence of inflammatory lesions in various organs and tissues: in the heart, endocarditis, myocarditis, and pericarditis; in the digestive system, stomatitis, sialoduct-adenitis, catarrhal enteritis, hepatitis, cholangitis, pancreatitis, and pancreas ductitis; in the respiratory system, bronchitis and segmental interstitial pneumonia; in the urinary system, focal interstitial nephritis, cystitis, and prostatitis; in the nervous system, aseptic leptomeningitis, choriomeningitis, gangliontis, and neuritis; in the hematopoietic system, lymphadenitis, splenitis, and thymitis. Dermatitis, panniculitis or myositis were also observed in some patients. Therefore, Kawasaki disease is a systemic inflammatory disease which mainly affects the cardiovascular system. These systemic inflammatory lesions are considered to correspond to the variegated clinical manifestaitions. The relationship between Kawasaki disease and infantile polyarteritis nodosa (IPN) were discussed, based on the clinicopathological characteristics.
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PMID:General pathology of Kawasaki disease. On the morphological alterations corresponding to the clinical manifestations. 744 9


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