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

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 Calcific Pancreatitis of Tropics is a disease of unknown aetiology and is characterised by chronic pancreatitis with calcification in young persons who present with pain, diabetes, and/or steatorrhoea. ERCP performed on 42 patients with this condition revealed changes compatible with chronic pancreatitis. These changes were however, more marked and somewhat different from those seen in the alcoholic chronic pancreatitis. Cystic dilatation, tortuosity, and obstruction of the main pancreatic duct were similar to that in alcoholic pancreatitis. The features of CCPT that were different from those of latter, were large pancreatic calculi, absence of strictures/stenosis and absence of irregularity of the ductal wall. The calculi were predominantly in the head region of the pancreas causing maximal dilatation of the main pancreatic duct in the head of pancreas. The secondary branches were stunted, short and scanty but revealed a lower grade of changes, than the changes documented in the main pancreatic duct. The pancreatic ductal changes in CCPT seems to be different from that seen in chronic alcoholic pancreatitis and may be due to the difference in the pathophysiology of the underlying disease.
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PMID:A pancreatography study of chronic calcific pancreatitis of the tropics. 1283 1

Prognosis in pancreatitis is at best difficult and uncertain. Certain complicating factors, however, occur in statistically established percentages of chronic cases: Calcification in 35 to 50 per cent, diabetes (usually mild) in 15 to 25 per cent, and cysts, pseudo-cysts or abscesses in 10 to 15 per cent. Steatorrhea (which may cause severe malnutrition) and diabetes are more common in cases in which calcification develops.
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PMID:The problem of prognosis in pancreatitis. 1479 75

Chronic relapsing pancreatitis is a disease of recurring acute episodes of severe upper abdominal pain which are progressive and gradually may become so severe and so frequent as to be intractable. Early in the disease the function of the gland and of the islet tissue may be disturbed only at the time of the acute attack, but subsequently these changes may become permanent and manifested by steatorrhea, creatorrhea and diabetes mellitus. The results of studies of pancreatic function parallel those of the pathologic process, and calcification of the pancreas is common. Medical treatment is generally disappointing. Paravertebral injections may control acute pain. Surgical therapy is none too satisfactory. Long continued biliary drainage, anastomosis between the common bile duct and duodenum and between the pancreatic duct and duodenum, section of the sphincter of Oddi, partial and total pancreatectomy and sympathectomy, splanchnicectomy and vagotomy have been helpful in relieving pain and in preventing the recurrence of attacks in some instances.
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PMID:Chronic relapsing pancreatitis. 1541 Jan 40

Tropical pancreatitis is a special type of chronic pancreatitis that is seen mainly in tropical countries. The prevalence of tropical pancreatitis is about 126/100,000 population in southern India. It occurs usually in young people, involves the main pancreatic duct and results in large ductal calculi. The etiology is not known, but genetic mutations such as the SPINK1 gene mutation and environmental factors are likely causes. Clinically, >90% of patients present with abdominal pain. About 25% of patients develop diabetes which generally requires insulin for its control but is ketosis-resistant. Painless diabetes is another clinical presentation in some patients. Most patients develop malnutrition during the course of the disease. Steatorrhea is less common. Patients with tropical pancreatitis may develop pancreatic cancer as a long-term complication. The diagnosis can be established by plain radiography of the abdomen, ultrasonography, computerized tomography scan of the abdomen or endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography. Management is directed towards relief from pain and control of diabetes and steatorrhea. Pain relief can be obtained by analgesics and enzyme supplementation with preparations rich in proteases. Endotherapy coupled with stone fragmentation by extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy is an effective therapy for those who fail to respond to medical therapy. Surgical decompression of the main pancreatic duct by lateral pancreato-jejunostomy is reserved for patients with severe pain non-responsive to other forms of therapy.
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PMID:Tropical pancreatitis. 1575 8

Chronic pancreatitis is mostly caused by heavy alcohol consumption and is characterized by the onset of symptoms in the fourth and fifth decade. Beginning in patients older than 65 years of age is rare. Leading symptom is recurrent or persisting abdominal pain which is missed only in approximately 5% of the cases. Chronic pancreatitis is classified as idiopathic if there is no anamnesis of alcohol abuse or some rare specific causes. The Idiopathic Chronic Senile Pancreatitis (ICSP) is a subset of the non-alcoholic pancreatitis and is characterized by advanced age at the time of first manifestation. Although life expectancy especially in chronic alcoholic pancreatitis is reduced, there are many patients who reach older age. The natural history in all forms of chronic pancreatitis shows a decrease in pain and the manifestation of exocrine and endocrine insufficiency as late complications. Especially in the elderly loss of weight may occur with steatorrhea and pancreatic diabetes mellitus as the dominating clinical problem of chronic pancreatitis. If pain persists treatment is symptomatically with analgesics. The possibility of causal surgery or the indication for endoscopic treatment of painful chronic pancreatitis should be proven in every single case. Standard pancreatin treatment consisting of large amounts of enzymes will abolish maldigestion. Pancreatic diabetes requires often insulin, there is a tendency to hypoglycaemia. In contrast to chronic pancreatitis cancer of the pancreas is a typical and frequent disease of the elderly. The prognosis is bad and one year life expectancy is just about 11%. One of the reasons is, that the diagnosis is found lately because early symptoms are missing. Specific symptoms like pain, weight loss or jaundice occur lately. In suspicion of pancreatic cancer a lot of methods of morphological diagnostic are available such as CT, MRCP, ultrasound, ERCP and PET, in addition the specific tumor markers CA 19-9 and CEA. After diagnostic is completed, curative resection is possible in only a low percentage of all cases. Old age is no contraindication for surgery, prognosis and the risk of surgery don't differ to other age groups. In most cases palliative therapy is the only possible option because of an advanced tumor stage. Sufficient pain therapy, endoscopic stenting in case of obstructive jaundice or gastroenterostomy in case of duodenal are useful interventions.
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PMID:[Chronic pancreatis and pancreatic carcinoma in the elderly]. 1598 40

This paper reviews the current literature on chronic pancreatitis (CP). Despite marked progress in diagnostic tools, predominately imaging methods, no consensus has been reached on the nomenclature of CP, ie diagnosis, classification, staging, pathomechanisms of pain and its optimal treatment. A major problem is that no single reliable diagnostic test exists for early-stage CP except histopathology (rarely available). This stage is characterised typically by recurrent acute pancreatitis +/- necrosis (eg pseudocysts). Acute pancreatitis is a well-defined condition caused in 80% of cases by gallstones or alcohol abuse. Alcoholic pancreatitis, in contrast to biliary pancreatitis, progresses to CP in the majority of patients. However, a definite CP-diagnosis is often delayed because progressive dysfunction and/or calcification, the clinical markers of CP, develop on average 5 years from disease onset. The progression rate is variable and depends on several factors eg aetiology, smoking, continued alcohol abuse. Repeated function testing eg by the faecal elastase test, is the best alternative for histology to monitor progression (or non-progression) of suspected (probable) to definite CP. The pathomechanism of pain in CP is multifactorial and data from different series are hardly comparable mainly because insufficient data of the various variables ie diagnosis, classification, staging of CP, pain pattern and presumptive pain cause, are provided. Pain in CP is rarely intractable except in the presence of cancer, opiate addiction or extra-pancreatic pain causes. Local complications like pseudocysts or obstructive cholestasis are the most common causes of severe persistent pain which can be relieved promptly by an appropriate drainage procedure. Notably, partial to complete pain relief is a common feature in 50-80% of patients with late-stage CP irrespective of surgery and about 50% of CP-patients never need surgery (or endoscopic intervention). The spontaneous "burn-out" thesis of CP is in accordance with this observation although precise data of this phenomenon are scarce. Recent observations indicate that the progression to late-stage CP is markedly delayed in non-alcoholic compared to alcoholic CP. Therefore, spontaneous pain relief is also delayed but it occurs in close association with severe exocrine insufficiency suggesting that aetiology has a major impact on the duration of early-stage CP and that the "burn-out" thesis appears valid both in uncomplicated alcoholic and nonalcoholic late-stage CP. For treatment of steatorrhea and diabetes the reader is referred to recent reviews. Mortality and survival are closely related to aetiology with an increased death rate of about 50% within 20 years from onset in alcoholic CP compared to a markedly better prognosis in hereditary and idiopathic "juvenile" CP. The risk of pancreatic cancer is increased particularly in nonalcoholic CP based on the longer survival, whereas the risk of extra-pancreatic (smoking-related) cancer is about 12-fold higher in alcoholic CP.
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PMID:Diagnosis and management of chronic pancreatitis: current knowledge. 1663 63

In the past year, there has been at least one important clinical paper that sheds light on the character and natural history of painful chronic pancreatitis, which has important clinical implications. In addition, several novel mutations have been described in the cationic trypsinogen gene in patients with hereditary pancreatitis. The mechanism by which these mutations cause pancreatic disease remains speculative. The diagnosis of early chronic pancreatitis is controversial. A novel noninvasive pancreatic function test (measurement of postprandial APOB-48) was reported but is unlikely to be a sensitive test of pancreatic function. Pancreatic fibrosis is frequently seen in alcoholics without chronic pancreatitis, and this makes it difficult to interpret the findings on endoscopic ultrasonogram. Recent studies highlight the difficulty in abolishing pancreatic steatorrhea. Recently fibrosing colonopathy in adult patients has been reported. Extracorporeal shockwave lithotripsy combined with endoscopic therapy failed to benefit patients with calcific chronic pancreatitis.
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PMID:Chronic pancreatitis. 1703 Nov 12

Pancreatic exocrine insufficiency with steatorrhea is a major consequence of pancreatic diseases (eg, chronic pancreatitis, cystic fibrosis, severe acute necrotizing pancreatitis, pancreatic cancer), extrapancreatic diseases such as celiac disease and Crohn's disease, and gastrointestinal and pancreatic surgical resection. Recognition of this entity is highly relevant to avoid malnutrition-related morbidity and mortality. Therapy for pancreatic exocrine insufficiency is based on the oral administration of pancreatic enzymes aiming at providing the duodenal lumen with sufficient active lipase at the time of gastric emptying of nutrients. Administration of enzymes in the form of enteric-coated minimicrospheres avoids acid-mediated lipase inactivation and ensures gastric emptying of enzymes in parallel with nutrients. Nevertheless, such factors as acidic intestinal pH and bacterial overgrowth may prevent normalization of fat digestion even in compliant patients. The present article critically reviews current therapeutic approaches to pancreatic exocrine insufficiency.
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PMID:Pancreatic enzyme therapy for pancreatic exocrine insufficiency. 1741 56

The diagnosis and treatment of patients with pancreatic strictures presents a multitude of clinical challenges. The etiology of pancreatic strictures is varied, including benign strictures subsequent to acute pancreatitis, trauma, postsurgical, post-endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP), and malignancy. Patients with strictures usually present with symptoms of recurrent pancreatitis, abdominal pain, weight loss, and/or steatorrhea. The absence of a prior history of pancreatitis or surgery increases the likelihood of malignancy. High-quality imaging studies of the pancreas, CT, MRI/magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography, or endoscopic ultrasound (EUS) scanning are utilized for better definition. Imaging detects an associated mass and/or demonstrates the ductal anatomy. Invasive procedures such as ERCP are performed to better define the causal relationships of the patient's symptoms or to obtain tissue diagnosis. Treatment goals include ameliorating symptoms, dilating the stricture, and ruling out cancer. The risk of malignancy underlies much of the intervention, which includes serology, cytologic analysis, and serial imaging. EUS has become the procedure of choice to rule out a mass, to evaluate the parenchyma for evidence of chronic pancreatitis, and to obtain fine-needle biopsies for tissue confirmation. In symptomatic patients or patients with indeterminate strictures, ERCP is used for direct pancreatography, tissue acquisition, and endoscopic treatment. Endotherapy includes sphincterotomy, dilation, and stenting to provide drainage. We view ERCP as the optimal first-line treatment modality. ERCP offers the potential of curative treatment and is less invasive than surgery, especially as some patients' symptoms are not severe enough to justify surgery. If patients do not experience relief of symptoms after several sessions of endoscopic therapy, surgery is the logical next step for definitive, long-term treatment.
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PMID:Treatment of pancreatic strictures. 1789 73


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