Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0030305 (pancreatitis)
16,014 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A series of 29 cases of amyloidosis of the alimentary tract is reported. Five cases (17%) were primary amyloidosis; 14 cases (48%) were amyloidosis secondary to other diseases (such as chronic inflammatory and neoplastic diseases); 10 cases (35%) were amyloidosis of the heredo-familial type connected with Familial Mediterranean Fever. In 23 patients (79%) the diagnosis was established by biopsies, and in 6 more cases on autopsy. Gastrointestinal involvement was found in all age groups. Gastro-enterologic complications observed in the present series include: diarrhea, malabsorption, ileus and gastrointestinal bleeding. In addition other conditions such as jaundice (3 cases), esophagitis and acute hemorrhagic pancreatitis were observed. In 22 patients proteinuria was observed and in 13 patients the nephrotic syndrome. Among 17 patients, in 11 the clinical picture before death was that of terminal renal failure. The survival after diagnosis among 14 patients reached 4 years in 9 cases, and 19 years in one case. The diagnostic value of the rectal biopsy is emphasized.
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PMID:[Gastrointestinal amyloidosis]. 18 89

Serum RNase (RNase I; ribonuclease 3'-pyrimidino-oligonucleotidohydrolase, EC 3.1.4.22) activity (mean +/- SD) with polycytidine as substrate was determined in normal individuals (24.9 +/- 3.0 units/ml) and in patients with pancreatic cancer (37.3 +/- 14.8), pancreatitis (38.5 +/- 12.6), nonpancreatic diseases (48.7 +/- 14.8), or renal failure (175.8 +/- 92.8). Patients with pancreatic cancer could not be distinguished from those with pancreatitis or with nonpancreatic disease, although the RNase activities in all of these differed from the activity in normal individuals. The serum RNase activities of four patients with resectable "curable") pancreatic carcinoma and two others with advanced pancreatic cancer without obstructive jaundice were normal. After total pancreatectomy, serum RNase activity remained in the high-normal range. The data presented here and data in the literature show that serum RNase cannot be of primarily pancreatic origin. The present study also demonstrates that measurement of its activity is not useful in early detection of pancreatic cancer.
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PMID:Serum RNase in the diagnosis of pancreatic carcinoma. 28 51

Pancreatitis has been described previously following renal transplantation, but not in association with chronic renal failure. Analysis of 168 patients with renal transplants revealed five who developed pancreatitis, three of whom died. All five were on treatment with prednisone and azathioprine. Four patients were seen with definite attacks of pancreatitis and chronic, stable renal failure from a variety of causes. None had received immunosuppressive agents, prednisone nor thiazide diuretics, but two were on regular frusemide. One patient was on maintenance dialysis, which could not be related directly to the pancreatitis. In either group alcohol ingestion, cholethiathiasis, or hypercalcaemia was not a factor. This diagnosis of pancreatitis was established on clinical grounds and serum amylast levels of greater than 900 iu/1. Similar serum amylast elevation was not found ina random group of patients with chronic renal failure. Hyperlipidaemia was not present in any patient with pancreatitis. Although hypercalcaemia and primary hyperparathyroidism was not found in the transplant and non-transplant subjects, elevated serum parathormone levels have been described in uraemic patients with normocalcaemia. Hyperparathyroidism may be a factor in the development of pancreatitis in reanl failure. Pancreatitis carries a significant mortality risk in renal transplantation. The four non-transplanted patients have survived, despite recurrent attacks of pancreatitis.
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PMID:Pancreatitis and renal disease. 31 21

Clinical and pathological information from forty patients who died with pathologically severe acute pancreatitis was correlated. Patients were classified into four etiologic groups: those with biliary pancreatitis (11 patients), alcoholic pancreatitis (13 patients), idiopathic pancreatitis (10 patients), and renal failure (6 patients). Antemortem diagnosis was made in only 57 per cent of the patients studied. The diagnosis was determined before death in 91 per cent of the biliary patients but in none of the renal patients. Thirty-seven patients died from their first clinical attack of pancreatitis. Operation in patients with biliary pancreatitis failed when biliary decompression was not provided. Peripancreatic sepsis was a frequent lethal mechanism in patients with biliary pancreatitis, but renal and respiratory failure were more common in patients with alcoholic pancreatitis.
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PMID:Lethal pancreatitis: a diagnostic dilemma. 42 98

An experience with 68 patients with hemorrhagic pancreatitis identified at operation or autopsy is reported. Sixteen of the patients were subjected to operation, and 6 survived after celiotomy and peritoneal irrigation. There were no survivors in the unoperated group. Death when the pancreas is hemorrhagic and due to pancreatitis occurs an average of 10 days after the onset of symptoms or within 7 days of hospitalization. In eight patients who presented in coma, the diagnosis was not established before death. Early recognition of patients with hemorrhagic pancreatitis can be facilitated by the routine use of amylase and methemalbumin determinations and peritoneal lavage. Translocation of large volumes of albumin-rich fluid from the intravascular compartment to the retroperitoneum and pleural and abdominal cavities is in part responsible for many of the signs, symptoms, and complications of hemorrhagic pancreatitis. These include hemoconcentration, hypotension, tachycardia, tachypnea, ascites, abdominal distress, respiratory insufficiency, and renal failure. Adequate initial resuscitation and intensive follow-up are probably the most important elements in the management of patients with hemorrhagic pancreatitis. Careful monitoring of fluid and electrolytes and blood gases is required to avoid shock and renal and pulmonary failure. The need for careful monitoring is emphasized by the number of our patients in whom inadequacies of fluid replacement and ventilation were often not appreciated until the patient was in extremis from shock or respiratory or renal failure. Antibiotics are indicated in patients with biliary tract disease and penetrating ulcer in whom the risk of secondary infection is considerable. Associated diseases that initiated pancreatitis and that in themselves may be life-threatening, such as acute cholecystitis or cholangitis, should be promptly treated by operation. Diagnostic and therapeutic lavage are justified in the treatment of hemorrhagic pancreatitis. Resection of the necrotic pancreas should be considered when the patient fails to improve after lavage and nonoperative resuscitation.
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PMID:Hemorrhagic pancreatitis. 45 56

The tetracycline class of antibiotics is infrequently used in clinical pediatrics due to its side effects: they include anorexia, nausea, vomiting and diarrhea. Hypersensitivity, a photosensibility reaction and a brownish discoloration of teeth is less frequently, a pseudotumor cerebri is rarely seen. Once therapeutic plasma levels are exceeded however, either by overdosage or decreased renal or hepatic clearance of the drug, serious complications like a secondary Fanconi-Syndrom or a nephrogenic diabetes insipidus can occur. The increased toxicity of tetracyclines in pregnant women is well known. We would like to report a fatal case, where serious complications like a secondary Fanconi-Syndrom, toxic degeneration of the liver, a clinically undected pancreatitis and a protein loosing enteropathy are though to be either direct consequences of tetracycline overdosage or the indirect effect of a shocklike syndrom by means of a nonoliguric renal failure induced by tetracycline.
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PMID:[Tetracyclin intoxication versus idiopathic pancreatitis: report of a case with multiple organ involvement (author's transl)]. 47 25

Acute fatty infiltration of the liver in pregnancy is characterised by microvacuolar fatty infiltration, without necrosis, occuring at the end of pregnancy. This syndrome, defined by Sheehan in 1940, remains rare. The authors were able to find 62 authentic cases in the french, english and german literature. The course is fatal in 75% of cases for the mother and 70% for the child. The gravity is related to hepatocellular failure, but also to extra-hepatic complications (renal failure, haemorrhagic syndrome, infectious complications, acute haemorrhagic and/or necrosing pancreatitis). When the course is favourable, the hepatic lesions disappear in a few weeks and there is no recurrence during subsequent pregnancies. The histological lesions of acute fatty infiltration of the liver in pregnancy are identical to those of fatty infiltration of the liver induced by cyclines and of Reye syndrome.
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PMID:[Acute fatty infiltration of the liver in pregnancy. One case (author's transl)]. 47 44

Compared with the general hospital population of patients with pancreatitis, patients with biliary tract or peptic ulcer disease have de novo pancreatic abscesses develop more commonly than patients with alcoholic pancreatitis. The apparent greater predisposition of the patient with biliary tract or peptic ulcer disease to infection does not seem to be due so much to these patients having potential sources of infection, such as an infected biliary tract or leaking ulcer, as to the fact that many patients with alcoholism and hemorrhagic pancreatitis never survive the fluid loss phase of pancreatitis long enough to have a secondary infection and abscess. The mortality associated with the development of de novo pancreatic abscesses is higher in patients with biliary disease, peptic ulcer or idiopathic pancreatitis in comparison with those patients with alcoholic pancreatitis. Some complications of pancreatic abscesses, such as renal failure, may be avoided through appropriate management of fluid losses during the hemorrhagic phase of pancreatitis preceding absecess formation. Good medical management and aggressive use of newer diagnostic and therapeutic modalities may reduce the mortality and complications of pancreatic abscess. Prompt drainage of an abscess once identified is essential to survival. Proximal colostomy or ileostomy is indicated in the patient with a colonic fistula. Large particulate chunks of necrotic pancreas are not easily evacuated through Penrose, cigarette or sump drains. Marsupialization of the abscess may be considered in patients with this type of abscess.
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PMID:Pancreatic abscess. 50 47

The authors illustrate the diagnostic possibilities of echography in the evaluation of the nontraumatic abdominal emergencies. They first refer about the methods of investigation and the scanning techniques. Then they illustrate the value of echography in the evaluation of the acute cholecystitis and pancreatitis pointing out the sensitivity of this procedure to the detection of the spread of the infections to the peritoneum and to the retroperitoneal spaces. The authors also present the echographic findings in the acute pathology of the retroperitoneum and of the female pelvic organs. Finally they emphasize the diagnostic value of ultrasounds in the search of the abdominal causes of the acute anemia and of the fever of unknown origin and as a preliminary investigation in case of actue renal failure.
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PMID:[Echographic evaluation of nontraumatic abdominal emergencies (author's transl)]. 55 87

Of 42 patients with malignant hypertension seen in five years in our institutions, seven (17%) had acute pancreatitis. All patients with pancreatitis were black, all had renal failure, and six received dialysis. No particular drug was received by all patients, gallstones were excluded in the majority, and alcoholism was not a factor. Clinical acute pancreatitis persisted for several weeks and five patients died, three of them with pancreatic pseudocyts. Among 259 patients on long-term hemodialysis programs in the same time period, only two additional cases of acute pancreatitis were observed and related to chronic alcoholism. Acute pancreatitis is a frequent complication of malignant hypertension, and when it happens it is severe and commonly fatal.
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PMID:Association between acute pancreatitis and malignant hypertension with renal failure. 67 80


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