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

A collected series of 64 cases of chronic relapsing pancreatitis is reported. Analysis of this material reveals several points of interest. There is a difference in the aetiological spectrum in Britain when compared with reports from France and the United States. In particular, nearly half the British cases were idiopathic. The clinical presentation and the age and sex ratios also varied with aetiology. Endoscopic retrograde cannulation of the pancreatic duct was of little value in confirming a diagnosis of pancreatitis in the problem case. This investigation did, however, demonstrate that a widespread dilatation of the pancreatic duct was a minority finding. In those patients with alcoholic pancreatitis follow-up studies have shown that, if the addiction can be broken, there is a 75 per cent chance that pain will diminish or disappear with the passage of time. The main indication for surgical intervention was severe pain and this study has shown that if strict criteria are observed, a worthwhile relief of symptoms can be achieved. In particular, subtotal pancreatectomy produced good results in up to 85 per cent of cases, although with an appreciable short term postoperative morbidity.
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PMID:Chronic relapsing pancreatitis: a review of 64 cases. 46 39

Data on mortality during a 48-month follow-up period in a group of 1410 alcoholics who had received inpatient treatment were evaluated. In 1266 patients known to be either living or deceased the death rate was 7.6%. The percentage of deceased subjects was highest in the group over 50 years of age. The mortality rate was higher for men (9.8%) than for women (4.8%); for those with more than one divorce (16.8%); for those who were not fit for work (18.1%) or were retired at the start of the treatment (43.3%); who were employed in the alcohol business (21.7%); who had reduced their alcohol consumption before treatment (13.4%); who were unemployed 6 months after discharge (12.4%). The mortality rate was higher for those with high scores on a scale assessing calmness in a personality inventory (7.9%) and low scores on a questionnaire assessing motivation (10.9%) and insight into the need of change (12.4%). Alcohol-related illness before the index treatment played an important role: the mortality rate was higher for those who had had Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome (40%), delirium tremens (15.3%), pancreatitis (13.9%) or cardiomyopathy (14.1%). The mortality rate was higher for treatment dropouts (12.9%) and for those who regularly or occasionally took sleeping pills (28.5%), psychoactive drugs (15.1%) or other drugs (11.5%) during treatment. In the follow-up periods substance use had a great effect on mortality. The mortality rate for those patients who still abstained from alcohol after 6 months (4.4%) was only a third of that for the patients who had relapsed (12.4%).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Addiction 1994 Jul
PMID:Mortality in alcoholic patients given inpatient treatment. 808 Nov 82

An improved knowledge of the natural history is the indispensible basis for a rational concept in regard to the diagnosis, classification, understanding and management of pain in chronic pancreatitis. Unfortunately, data on the natural history of CP are scarce and conflicting. Some relevant observations of our prospective long-term study of a mixed medical-surgical cohort comprising 207 patients with alcoholic CP (mean follow-up 17 years from onset) are summarized. In early-stage CP, episodes of recurrent pancreatitis were predominant. Severe persistent pain was typically associated with local complications (mainly postnecrotic cysts in 54%; symptomatic cholestasis in 24%) relieved definitely by a drainage procedure. Lasting pain remission was documented in >80% of the whole cohort within 10 years from onset in association with marked pancreatic dysfunction. From our experience, the relief of "chronic" pain regularly follows selective surgery tailored to the presumptive pain cause or it occurs spontaneously in uncomplicated advanced CP (excluding narcotic addiction).
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PMID:The natural history of alcoholic chronic pancreatitis. 1139 4

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

Acute and chronic gastrointestinal problems are common in the setting of excessive alcohol use, and excessive alcohol use is associated with injury to all parts of the gastrointestinal tract. There is mounting evidence of gastrointestinal injury and increased cancer risk even from moderate alcohol consumption. The major causes of alcohol-related morbidity and mortality within the gastrointestinal system are liver disease, pancreatitis and gastrointestinal cancer. Other alcohol-related intestinal dysfunction is common but not life-threatening, leading to diarrhoea, malabsorption and nutritional deficiencies. This review describes non-neoplastic and neoplastic alcohol-related disorders of the gastrointestinal tract, omitting the liver, which has been reviewed elsewhere.
Addiction 2020 Jun 08
PMID:Alcohol use disorder and the gut. 3251 12