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)

Men drafted into the Army, hospitalized during 1944 to 1945 for service-connected trauma to the extremities, and consequently separated for disability were followed for mortality from January 1946 to April 1977. Three groups were established consisting of those whose injury resulted in (a) limb amputation, (b) disfiguration without loss of body part, (c) loss of part of hand or part of foot. Group (a) had a mortality, standardized for age and calendar time, 1.4 times that of Group (b), matched on age and length of service at admission, and 1.3 times that of Group (c), similar on age and length of service to Group (a). The excess mortality of limb amputees was statistically significant (P less than .05) for ischemic heart disease, other diseases of the cardiovascular system, suicide by poisoning, alcholic cirrhosis, and cute pancreatitis. Possibly (P less than .1) there was also an increased risk of diabetes and cancer of the buccal cavity and pharynx.
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PMID:Report to the Veterans' Administration Department of Medicine and Surgery on service-connected traumatic limb amputations and subsequent mortality from cardiovascular disease and other causes of death. 39 10

Findings from 44 autopsy examinations of cardiac transplant patients during a 10-year period were reviewed. The autopsy rate was 85%. One half of the autopsy patients underwent original transplantation for ischemic heart disease and 34% for cardiomyopathy. Survival after transplantation ranged from 0 (intraoperative) to 91 months. Rejection (including hyperacute rejection) was responsible for 41% of deaths, followed by infection (25%), and intraoperative deaths at first transplantation (9%). Most of the remaining complications were related to surgery or artificial heart support, accelerated allograft atherosclerosis, and lymphoma. Infections were not only responsible for a substantial percentage of deaths but were also a co-morbid finding in a number of patients who died primarily of other causes. Pulmonary infections represented the most common anatomic site. Twenty-five percent of the autopsy patients had gastrointestinal and/or pancreatic abnormalities, principally mucosal inflammation, erosions or hemorrhage, and pancreatitis. Review of premortem rejection history indicated that 64% of patients who died of or with rejection at autopsy had had an episode of rejection 3 weeks after transplantation and/or at least one episode of severe rejection.
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PMID:Autopsy findings in cardiac transplant patients. A 10-year experience. 154 52

Diseases presenting with dyspepsia fall into two general categories: organic and functional. Overall, most patients with dyspepsia have no underlying identifiable disease process. The diagnostic yield of organic causes is less in younger patients, and, conversely, serious organic lesions are common in elderly dyspeptic patients. The commonest organic causes of dyspepsia are peptic ulcer disease, gastroesophageal reflux, biliary tract disease, and gastric cancer. Symptoms and physical signs may help to differentiate these organic causes from functional dyspepsia but endoscopic or radiographic/ultrasound studies are usually necessary to ensure the appropriate diagnosis. Less common organic causes of dyspepsia not to be overlooked include drugs, pancreatitis, malabsorption syndromes, metabolic disorders, ischemic heart disease, and collagen vascular disorders.
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PMID:Dyspepsia: organic causes and differential characteristics from functional dyspepsia. 189 24

With the introduction of ultrasonic examination (USE) and computed tomography into practice, nonparasitic cysts of the liver are recognised much more frequently. They were revealed by USE in 0.99% and by computed tomography in 2.3% of cases. The author analyses 90 patients with hepatic cysts, 13 of them had oncological diseases, 15 had cholecystitis and pancreatitis, and 26 had ischemic heart disease and hypertension. A complicated course and rapid growth of the structures were the indications for operation. Percutaneous puncture was conducted in 5 cases, 3 patients were operated on for cysts of the liver, in 5 patients the operation on the cysts was performed during cholecystectomy. The most expedient palliative intervention is excision of the external wall of the cyst and tamponade of the remaining cavity by a part of the greater omentum on a pedicle.
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PMID:[Diagnosis and treatment of non-parasitic cysts of the liver]. 204 21

Screening for dyslipoproteinemias should be undertaken in all individuals older than 20 years of age at least once every 5 years. The initial screening, as recommended by the Adult Treatment Guidelines Panel of the National Cholesterol Education Program, is to determine the concentration of total blood cholesterol. This initial determination can be made on blood obtained in the nonfasting state. Further evaluation of the patient's lipoprotein concentrations is dependent upon the presence of other cardiovascular risk factors. in the absence of definite coronary heart disease, hypertension, diabetes mellitus, a family history of coronary artery disease, cigarette smoking, or severe obesity, the patient with a total blood cholesterol concentration less than 200 mg/dL requires no specific instruction and should have a repeated screening performed within 5 years. Patients with blood cholesterol concentrations greater than 200 mg/dL should have their lipoprotein profiles determined if they have atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease or two other cardiovascular disease risk factors. The lipoprotein profile includes the determination of fasting cholesterol and triglyceride and HDL cholesterol concentrations. From these values, the LDL cholesterol concentration can be calculated. This LDL cholesterol concentration is central in selecting the appropriate therapy. HDL cholesterol concentrations may be useful in evaluating patients with ischemic heart disease. Concentrations of HDL cholesterol less than 35 mg/dL are associated with increased risk for coronary artery disease. Although there is currently no convincing evidence that support the specific treatment of depressed HDL cholesterol concentrations, therapy directed to modulating lipoprotein metabolism in patients with heart disease and low HDL concentrations may be of benefit. Patients with recurrent abdominal pain, pancreatitis, and eruptive xanthomatosis frequently have fasting hypertriglyceridemia concentrations exceeding 1000 mg/dL. These patients should be identified in order to effectively reduce their triglyceride concentrations, which can prevent these complications.
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PMID:Detection and evaluation of dyslipoproteinemia. 219 76

In a five-year period from February 1984, 76 orthotopic heart transplantations were performed in the most extensive heart transplantation programme in the Harvard Medical School in Boston, Massachusetts. The average age of the patients was 43 years (range 14-61 years) and the sex distribution was 55 men/21 women. Cardiomyopathy and ischaemic heart disease were the commonest indications for transplantation. The actuarical survival was 84% after one year, 81% after two years and 76% after five years. When the operative lethality is excluded, the one-year survival was 91%, the two-year survival 88% and the five-year survival 82%. Six operative deaths occurred within the first 30 days and seven late deaths, five of these from acute rejection and two as a result of transplant atherosclerosis. No deaths were due to infection. Twelve patients developed 14 general surgical complications and laparotomy proved necessary in ten cases. One of the patients died from haemorrhagic pancreatitis and the remainder had no sequelae. An association was found between tissue type compatibility (human leukocyte antigen (HLA)) between donor and recipient and the occurrence of steroid resistant rejections.
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PMID:[Heart transplantation in the era of cyclosporin]. 231 33

The mortality and the causes of death have been studied in a cohort consisting of 1548 male alcoholics in Stockholm. During the period 1969-1981 there were 542 cases of death in this population. The mortality rates were triple those for males in Stockholm generally. Using the official causes of death there was a highly significant excess mortality in the following diagnostic groups: Cancer in the upper digestive region, primary hepatic cancer, cirrhosis in the liver, pancreatitis, pneumonia, alcoholism and alcoholic poisoning, suicides and other causes of violent death as well as ischemic heart disease. The underlying and contributing causes of death on the death certificates were reclassified according to ICD-rules using clinical records and autopsy protocols. It was found that the underlying cause of death was incorrect in 21.8% of the cases. Important information was withheld in further 19.8%. After validation there was no longer any excess mortality in ischemic heart disease. The number of alcohol-related diagnoses, i.e. alcoholic cardiomyopathy, cirrhosis and fatty liver with alcoholism and alcoholic intoxication, was much greater. It is concluded that there is a underreporting of alcohol-related diseases and injuries which has a great influence on the reliability of death statistics.
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PMID:Validation of diagnoses on death certificates for male alcoholics in Stockholm. 358 75

Hyperlipoproteinemia type V, with serum triglyceride concentrations of about 20 mmol/l, was detected in a pair of monozygotic, 40-year-old twin brothers. One of them had had recurrent attacks of pancreatitis, the other not. The endocrine and exocrine pancreatic functions were apparently normal, supporting that the pancreatitis was secondary to the hypertriglyceridemia. After successful lipid-lowering therapy the attacks of abdominal pain disappeared and remained absent during a 13-year follow-up period. The other twin died of ischemic heart disease nine years after the discovery of his lipid abnormality. The reduction of his lipid levels had been much less successful. His average "atherogenic index" (the ratio of cholesterol in low density to that in high density lipoproteins) was normal but increased to a very high value if cholesterol in very low density lipoproteins was also included together with the low density ones in the numerator. Lipoprotein particles modified in composition may have contributed to an increased uptake through a scavenger pathway and promoted atherosclerosis.
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PMID:Hypertriglyceridemia--acute pancreatitis--ischemic heart disease. A case study in a pair of monozygotic twins. 359 70

Mortality and morbidity from ischaemic heart disease (IHD) was studied in 5404 Finnish males aged 35-64 years who had been hospitalised for alcohol-related disease in 1972 without any admissions for IHD during that same period. By record-linkage, morbidity and mortality were followed up to the end of 1975. The mortality of patients with alcohol-related diseases was compared to 1120 patients with acute appendicitis by calculating indirectly age-standardised mortality ratios (SMR). The mortality and morbidity of 5963 patients with acute myocardial infarction or angina pectoris was also studied. The following SMRs for IHD mortality, non-fatal-IHD-hospitalisation and for mortality from all causes respectively, were found: acute myocardial infarction 11.6, 7.2 and 7.2; alcohol intoxication 6.0, 4.5 and 4.5; angina pectoris 5.2, 10.5 and 3.4; liver cirrhosis 2.2, 2.5 and 11.8; alcoholism 1.9, 1.9 and 3.6; pancreatitis 1.8, 1.2 and 4.4; alcohol psychosis 1.7, 2.5 and 4.2. IHD mortality and morbidity appeared to be more prevalent in patients hospitalised with alcohol intoxication than in patients with other alcohol-related diseases. This suggests that rapid drinking predisposes both to serious intoxication and to fatal disturbances of cardiac rhythm.
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PMID:Alcohol-related diseases associated with ischaemic heart disease: a three-year follow-up of middle-aged male hospital patients. 376 98

Information on the prevalence of ECG abnormalities in patients with acute pancreatitis together with pertinent simultaneous laboratory data have been missing. This prospective study was undertaken in order to clarify these points. 54 patients with 72 acute attacks of pancreatitis were examined. 31 patients (57%) had transient ECG abnormalities. The ECG changes consisted mainly of unspecific T-wave changes (25 cases) and accelerated atrial or nodal rhythms (8 cases). The ECG changes were more common in patients with biliary etiology (80%) than in patients with alcoholic etiology (49%), probably partly due to the higher age of the patients with biliary disease. The laboratory data did not give any clue to the cause of the ECG changes. The authors believe that the ECG changes may be due to underlying ischemic heart disease unmasked by the stress of acute pancreatitis, and/or imbalance of the autonomous nervous system.
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PMID:Transient ECG changes during acute attacks of pancreatitis. 616 2


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