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

Early recognition of pseudocyst formation in pancreatitis has been a very important contribution of diagnostic ultrasound. Furthermore, haemorrhage or abscess formation, an additional complication, can also be suspected by this diagnostic modality. False aneurysm formation of a larger, neighbouring artery is not easily recognized by ultrasound. It is for this reason that this case report is made.
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PMID:False aneurysm of the superior mesenteric artery--a complication of pancreatitis. 50 33

During the period from 1975 to 1991, 41 patients with 60 visceral artery aneurysms were treated at the Affiliated Hospitals of Emory University. The total included 13 patients in whom 16 aneurysms were treated primarily by transarterial embolization. There were seven hepatic artery aneurysms, three splenic artery aneurysms, three gastroduodenal artery aneurysms, two left gastric artery aneurysms, and one right gastroepiploic artery aneurysm. Average age of these patients was 50 years; there were eight males and five females. Seven patients presented with gastrointestinal bleeding, and two patients presented with abdominal pain. In four patients, the aneurysm was an incidental finding. Etiology of the true or false aneurysms consisted of pancreatitis in two patients, trauma in three patients, connective tissue disease in one, and was unknown in the remainder. Embolization was performed in seven cases with Gianturco coils and Gelfoam, with coils alone in four, with Gelfoam alone in four, and with detachable balloons in one instance. Complete occlusion was achieved initially in 13 cases. Recanalization occurred in two patients over a mean follow-up period of 8.6 months, requiring re-embolization in one patient, whereas the other patient was managed expectantly. In three cases, embolization was unsuccessful: two cases required surgical correction, and one case was managed expectantly. Only one complication was related to the embolization procedure, which was a common hepatic arterial dissection that proceeded to the formation of a false aneurysm. Embolization as the primary treatment modality for visceral artery aneurysms should be considered in patients with the following diagnoses: pseudoaneurysms associated with pancreatitis, intrahepatic aneurysms, most splenic artery aneurysms, and gastric, gastroduodenal, and gastroepiploic aneurysms. The procedure has a low risk and may obviate a difficult surgical procedure, but it does not preclude surgical intervention should the need arise.
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PMID:Nonoperative management of visceral aneurysms and pseudoaneurysms. 141 17

A 13 cm false aneurysm of the common hepatic artery developed after repeated episodes of pancreatitis in a 47-year-old man with diabetes who was undergoing chronic hemodialysis. A balloon-tipped catheter was positioned in the common hepatic artery before operation. This maneuver allowed proximal control of the aneurysm and suture closure of the hepatic artery defect with minimal dissection and blood loss in this high-risk patient.
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PMID:Preoperative balloon-tipped catheter placement for proximal control in visceral artery aneurysm surgery. 338 76

One hundred forty-three patients underwent cardiac transplantation from 1980 to 1985; 122 received a heart, 19 received a heart-lung, and two received a heart-liver transplant. All patients received immunosuppression with prednisone and cyclosporine. General surgical complications have developed since transplantation in 40 patients (28%). Of these, 17 patients have required surgery: exploratory laparotomy (10 patients), inguinal or ventral herniorrhaphy (two patients), repair of false aneurysm of the femoral artery (two patients), repair of lymphocele of the groin (two patients), and incision and drainage of a perirectal abscess (one patient). Of the 10 patients who required laparotomy, three underwent sigmoid resection for a perforated sigmoid diverticulum (all survived), two underwent small bowel resection for perforation (both died), two had free intraperitoneal air with no site of perforation found (one died), one underwent a cholecystostomy and one a cholecystectomy for acute calculous cholecystitis (one died), and one underwent an elective pyloroplasty for gastric outlet obstruction secondary to vagus nerve injury during heart-lung transplantation and survived. All patients who underwent elective surgery survived. Six patients died without operation and at autopsy were found to have unrecognized general surgical complications including pancreatitis (three patients), cecal ulceration with sepsis (two patients), and jejunal perforation secondary to peritoneal dialysis (one patient). Eleven other patients had severe abdominal pain and five had gastrointestinal hemorrhage not requiring operation. Proper management of these patients includes early and aggressive diagnosis of conditions requiring operative intervention, strict attention to surgical technique, and careful titration of dose of immunosuppressive drugs. The 28% incidence of general surgical complications associated with heart and heart-lung transplantation emphasizes the role of the general surgeon in the management of these complex patients.
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PMID:General surgical complications in heart and heart-lung transplantation. 393 Dec 74

A retrospective evaluation of embolotherapy in patients with arterial liver hemorrhages was carried out. Twenty-six patients, ranging in age from 10 days to 77 years with active arterial liver hemorrhages, underwent non-surgical embolotherapy. Bleeding was attributed to trauma (n = 21), tumor (n = 3), pancreatitis (n = 1), or unknown cause (n = 1). Twenty-nine embolizations were performed via a transfemoral (n = 26) or biliary (n = 2) approach. One bare Wallstent was placed into the common hepatic artery via to an axillary route to cover a false aneurysm due to pancreatitis. Treatment was controlled in 4 patients by cholangioscopy (n = 2) or by intravascular ultrasound (n = 2). Prior surgery had failed in 3 patients. Intervention controlled the hemorrhage in 24 of 26 (92%) patients within 24 h. Embolotherapy failed in 1 patient with pancreatic carcinoma and occlusion of the portal vein. In 1 patient with an aneurysm of the hepatic artery treated by Wallstent insertion, total occlusion was not achieved in the following days, as demonstrated by CT and angiography. However, colour Doppler flow examination showed no flow in the aneurysm 6 months later. Complications were one liver abscess, treated successfully by percutaneous drainage for 10 days, and one gallbladder necrosis after superselective embolization of the cystic artery. Embolization is a effective tool with a low complication rate in the treatment of liver artery hemorrhage, even in patients in whom surgery has failed.
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PMID:Non-operative management of arterial liver hemorrhages. 993 86

The presence of splancnic aneurysms associated with pancreatitis represents an uncommon evidence (10%) but extremely formidable for the high mortality related to the elevate risk of rupture (50%). A case of a broken gastroduodenal artery pseudoaneurysm plugged in the pancreatic head in a patient with chronic pancreatitis surgically treated is reported. The Authors believe that in presence or in suspicious of peripancreatic pseudoaneurysm bleeding, showed by abdominal echography or CT scan, is mandatory the execution of splancnic and peripancreatic vessels angiography to determine the correct localization of the aneurysm, essential to determining the best surgical treatment. Gastroduodenal artery before the origin from the right epatic artery has been tied in presence of an anatomic variant of origin and division of the hepatic arteries, previously showed with the angiographic examination. The exclusion and the complete thrombosis of the false aneurysm was demonstrated with the intraoperatory Doppler control and confirmed by CT scan before the dismission. This surgical strategy avoid a pancreatic resection, potentially burdened from an higher risk of mortality and morbidity as than the artery exclusion.
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PMID:[Gastroduodenal artery pseudoaneurysm ruptured at the pancreatic head]. 1128 68

Immunoglobulin G4 (IgG4)-related disease is a systemic autoimmune disease that can affect various organs. Corticosteroid therapy is generally an effective treatment; however, IgG4-related aortic lesions pose a risk of aortic rupture related to corticosteroid use. Here, we report a case of IgG4-related periaortitis complicated with a false aneurysm during corticosteroid therapy. Although endovascular repair was successfully performed, autoimmune pancreatitis and sclerosing cholangitis emerged after surgery. The multiple lesions associated with IgG4-related disease were resolved through continuous corticosteroid therapy. Our case suggests that both appropriate surgical intervention and continuous corticosteroid therapy are essential for the treatment of IgG4-related periaortitis.
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PMID:Endovascular Repair of a False Aneurysm Developing from IgG4-Related Periaortitis during Corticosteroid Therapy. 2612 11

Laparoscopic cholecystectomy is a commonly performed surgical procedure. The postoperative course is often uncomplicated; however, complications like infection, biliary leakage, and bleeding and bile duct injury can occur. Here we report on a patient with common bile duct obstruction and haemobilia due to a false aneurysm of the right hepatic artery after laparoscopic cholecystectomy, masked by biliary pancreatitis, complicated by an infarction of the liver after embolisation. The aetiology of upper gastrointestinal bleeding greatly varies. This case is an uncommon case of gastrointestinal bleeding due to a false aneurysm of the right hepatic artery, which was successfully treated.
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PMID:Acute biliary pancreatitis masking haemobilia due to a false aneurysm of the right hepatic artery after laparoscopic cholecystectomy. 3011 7