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

The study was designed to determine the prevalence of alcoholism/problem drinking among emergency medical admissions. Of 203 emergency admissions to two medical wards, 18% were found to be problem drinkers, using the brief Michigan alcoholic screening test (MAST) questionnaire. Problem drinking was found in 31% of males and 5% of females. Most drinking was done with friends (77%) and at the "rum shop" (62%). Fifty-one per cent of problem drinkers started between the ages of sixteen and twenty years. Seventy per cent of all problem drinkers had a first degree family relative who drank compared to 28% of non-drinkers. A high prevalence of alcoholism (48%) was found among smokers. Housestaff detected just over half of male (56%) and female (60%) alcoholics who were MAST-positive. Medical diagnoses among MAST-positive patients were gastrointestinal (cirrhosis, pancreatitis and hepatitis) in 32%, neurological (delirium tremens, seizures and subdural hematoma) in 27% and cardiovascular (cardiomyopathy, heart failure and dysrhythmias) in 16%. The detected level of problem drinking is likely to cause significant morbidity, and allows an important opportunity for intervention. The use of questionnaire methods to screen for alcoholism needs further evaluation in the region.
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PMID:Questionnaire detection of problem drinkers among acute medical admissions. 189 23

We report on 6 patients with chronic pancreatitis and pancreatic pseudocysts, operated on for acute bleeding into the cyst. The splenic artery and vein, the renal artery, the aorta and the splenic parenchyma were identified as bleeding sites. In 4 patients the acute hemorrhage occurred during hospitalization. In all patients the operative procedure included hemostasis and/or drainage/resection of the cyst. In 3 cases an additional splenectomy was performed. None of the patients died postoperatively. In 5 patients the pancreatitis was induced by alcohol abuse. In all patients the pseudocysts were diagnosed prior to the acute hemorrhage. CT-scan and angiography were able to localize the origin of the bleeding in 2 cases.
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PMID:Acute gastrointestinal bleeding as a complication of pancreatic pseudocysts. 202 93

Truncal subdiaphragmatic vagotomy with pyloroplasty was used in 28 patients with chronic relapsing pancreatitis, 19 of them were inclined to alcohol abuse. In 27 patients followed-up during 3 years, 18 were delivered from pain attacks resulting from chronic pancreatitis, the attacks became rarer and less intense in 4 patients, 3 patients had single attacks of pancreatic colic. In 2 patients the results of treatment were assessed as unsatisfactory due to often admission to the hospital for pain attacks. They were not found to have increased excretory and endocrine insufficiency of the pancreas in this period, but had mental disorders.
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PMID:[Effect of truncal subdiaphragmatic vagotomy on the pain syndrome in patients with chronic recurrent pancreatitis]. 217 81

Chronic calcific pancreatitis (CCP) is the most clear-cut form of chronic pancreatitis. Till date, the common treatment of CCP has been directed toward discontinuation of alcohol consumption if the disease is associated closely with alcohol abuse, relief of pain, enzyme replacement, and the management of some complications like diabetes mellitus, cyst or abscess of the pancreas, malnutrition etc. In 1979, the research group for chronic pancreatitis in Japan proposed the therapeutic policy for this disease as illustrated in Fig. 1. A plausible new treatment is the dissolution of protein precipitates or calcified stones in pancreatic ducts by oral or intravenous administration of drugs.
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PMID:Dissolution of pancreatic stones. 221 44

Pancreatitis is a common but rather poorly understood entity most often associated with alcohol abuse or biliary tract disease. Despite the availability of a variety of diagnostic tests and imaging techniques, the diagnosis of pancreatitis continues to be primarily a clinical one. Of major concern to the emergency physician is distinguishing pancreatitis from other, potentially lethal, causes of abdominal pain, and identifying those patients with severe pancreatitis who are at risk for a complicated course secondary to the remote systemic effects of the disease.
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PMID:Pancreatitis. 222 92

The majority (about 75%) of patients who suffer from acute pancreatitis do so as a consequence of gallstones or alcohol abuse. The other 25% of patients often present difficult diagnostic problems. Over several years the author has accumulated a series of patients with remedial causes of pancreatitis. They include a group of congenital conditions such as pancreas divisum, choledochal cysts and congenital abnormalities of the pancreatic ductal system. Patients who have had pancreatitis and who have an intact gallbladder often have stones that are difficult to identify. Repeated attacks of pancreatitis in the absence of any other apparent cause justifies cholecystectomy, which will often identify the cause so that recurrence can be prevented. A group of nonanatomic causes are also known. They include hyperlipidemia, drugs and toxins, certain systemic illnesses such as systemic lupus erythematosus, pregnancy, hypercalcemia, hereditary causes and occasionally cancer. In his lecture the author reviews the various etiologies of acute pancreatitis and describes an algorithm that can be used when the diagnosis is difficult.
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PMID:Recurrent acute pancreatitis--rarely idiopathic: 1989 Du Pont lecture. 226 8

A retrospective review of the Grenfell Regional Health Services experience with pancreatitis over a 20-year period (1968-1987) has been presented. The small number of cases in this series precludes meaningful statistical analysis, however, in general, one can state that native peoples are represented in this study in roughly the same proportion as they are represented in the population served. We have demonstrated that pancreatitis in its chronic form does occur in the Inuit of Northern Labrador. Given the prominent role that alcohol abuse plays in the social and behavioral ills of Labrador's native peoples as reflected in the high incidence of family violence, accidental deaths, and suicides, one might anticipate a disproportionately high incidence of pancreatitis and its chronic sequelae among the Inuit. The answer to this seeming paradox may be found through future study of the nature of the alcohol consumed, its pattern of consumption or of genetically-determined differences in the metabolism of alcohol and its toxic effects within the body, of differences in the composition of pancreatic secretions, or of environmental and dietary factors.
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PMID:Pancreatitis in northern Newfoundland and Labrador: a 20-year review of the Grenfell Regional Health Services experience. 230 86

Rupture of the spleen occurred in five patients (aged 44-59 years) in the course of chronic or chronic recurrent pancreatitis. In three patients the rupture was a consequence of perisplenic adhesions associated with subclinical chronic pancreatitis, in another there was direct enzymatic erosion of the splenic capsule via the phrenicosplenic ligament, and in the fifth patient haemorrhagic infarction followed splenic venous thrombosis. In four patient there was a history of chronic pancreatitis related to alcohol abuse. On admission all patients complained of breathing-related pains radiating into the shoulder. Three patients also had abnormal radiological signs in the left lower lung field (high diaphragm, effusion, infiltration). The findings can be explained pathogenetically by infiltration of the phrenicosplenic ligament which connects the tail of the pancreas with the splenic hilus and the diaphragm. The final diagnostic confirmation and indication for surgery was in all cases made by computed tomography. This is thus the imaging procedure of choice if splenic involvement is suspected in the course of chronic pancreatitis.
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PMID:[Hemorrhagic lesions of the spleen in chronic and chronic recurrent pancreatitis]. 234 Jul 99

Fifty-one patients, 35 men and 16 women, with acute pancreatitis were studied prospectively with early computed tomography (CT). Etiological factors for acute pancreatitis were alcohol abuse (n = 28), gallstones (n = 14), pancreas cancer (n = 3) and miscellaneous (n = 6). Admission serum amylase levels ranged between 68-5,856 U/L with a mean of 1,090 +/- 1,369 U/L. The mean serum amylase level was significantly different between patients with alcoholic pancreatitis (439 +/- 302 U/L) and gallstone pancreatitis (2,480 +/- 1,575) (p less than 0.001). The initial pancreatic CT findings and corresponding mean serum amylase levels were in CT grade A (pancreas normal) 1,499 +/- 1,569 U/L (n = 11), in CT grade B (pancreatic enlargement with inflammation confined to pancreas) 1,144 +/- 1,542 U/L (n = 18), in CT grade C (inflammatory extension into one peripancreatic space) 722 +/- 962 U/L (n = 13) and in CT grade D (inflammatory extension into two or more peripancreatic spaces) 590 +/- 369 U/L (n = 9). However, on separating the etiology subgroups, there was no increase or decrease in the serum amylase level with increasing pancreatic inflammatory involvement. Pancreatic complications (pseudocyst, abscess, necrosis) requiring surgical intervention developed only in patients with CT grades C and D. We conclude that within the etiologic subgroups there is no correlation between the initial serum amylase level and the extent of pancreatic involvement visualized by CT. These findings provide a pathological basis for the clinical observation that the initial serum amylase level cannot predict the outcome in acute pancreatitis.
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PMID:Correlation of serum amylase levels with pancreatic pathology and pancreatitis etiology. 245 72

Eight of 17 patients with necrotizing pancreatitis (47 percent) developed 12 intestinal fistulas. Pancreatitis occurred most often secondary to alcohol abuse, and fistula complicated controlled open drainage of the lesser sac more often than sump or Penrose drainage of the lesser sac. Fistulas appeared more often in patients with two or more drainage operations than in those with a single drainage procedure. Most duodenal fistulas closed with nonoperative therapy, whereas jejunal and colonic fistulas required operative closure. Operative techniques included both simple suture closure and resection with anastomosis. Five patients (29 percent) died. Thus, although frequent debridement and controlled open drainage may reduce the mortality rate of necrotizing pancreatitis, it appears to increase the likelihood of intestinal fistulas, which may require operative treatment.
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PMID:Intestinal fistula complicating necrotizing pancreatitis. 258 94


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