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Query: UMLS:C0030305 (
pancreatitis
)
16,014
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A radioimmunoassay system showed elastase levels of 128 to 232 ng/mL in normal rat serum. The average normal value was approximately 64-fold greater than the minimal detectable amount. No cross-immunoreactivity was found with human
elastase 1
, porcine elastase, and trypsin. The elastase and amylase levels in rat serum were measured during
pancreatitis
induced by trypsin (group 1) and normal saline solution (group 2). Within 15 minutes the serum elastase and amylase levels increased significantly and remained elevated. The serum elastase levels in group 1 were significantly higher than in group 2. Hemorrhagic pancreatitis was found in group 1 and edematous
pancreatitis
was found in group 2 five hours after induction of
pancreatitis
. Elastase levels in these tissues were significantly lower than those in normal tissue. The levels in ascitic fluid were higher than those found in serum.
...
PMID:Radioimmunoreactive serum elastase levels and histologic changes during experimental pancreatitis in rats. 617 98
Pancreatic elastases have been assumed to be implicated in the pathogenesis of the vascular injury in acute hemorrhagic
pancreatitis
. We reported the purification and some properties of human pancreatic elastases. In the present study, the value of the determination of serum pancreatic elastases was investigated. 39 patients with acute hemorrhagic and acute edematous
pancreatitis
were studied. Serum
elastase 1
(E-1) and elastase 2(E-2) were measured by radioimmunoassay recently developed in our laboratory. The molecular form of exogenous and endogenous elastases in serum was studied by gel filtration on Sephadex G-200. The mean and standard deviation of serum pancreatic E-1 and E-2 were 1.49 +/- 0.49 ng/ml and 292 +/- 82 ng/ml, respectively. In acute pancreatitis, both E-1 and E-2 had markedly raised serum concentrations. However, no significant difference was observed between acute hemorrhagic and acute edematous
pancreatitis
. Endogenous immunoreactive E-1 and E-2 were present in serum in complex form with alpha 1-antitrypsin. In contrast, exogenous elastases were bound to alpha 1-antitrypsin and alpha 2-macroglobulin.
...
PMID:Diagnostic significance of immunological assay of pancreatic elastases in acute pancreatitis. 619 May 87
Carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) and
elastase 1
in the serum were determined by enzyme immunoassay and radioimmunoassay, respectively, in 224 healthy subjects, 49 patients with
pancreatitis
, 53 patients with pancreatic carcinoma and 129 patients with cancer in other organs. The CEA concentrations in the serum were significantly higher in patients with pancreatic carcinoma than in those with
pancreatitis
, but this concentration was not a satisfactory indicator of pancreatic carcinoma localised to allow irradication by resection as it was raised in only 47% of the patients. High CEA concentrations were also slightly, but not significantly, more frequent in patients with cancer of the pancreatic body or tail, and unresectable cancer or cancer of more than 6.0 cm in longest diameter than in those with cancer of the pancreatic head, resectable cancer or cancer of less than 6.0 cm diameter. Serum
elastase 1
was raised in only 42% of the patients with pancreatic carcinoma and could not be used to distinguish patients with pancreatic carcinoma from those with
pancreatitis
. In contrast with CEA, however, its concentration was abnormally high significantly more frequently in patients with cancer of less than 6.0 cm in longest diameter than in those with larger tumours. It was also raised slightly, but not significantly, more frequently in those with cancer of the pancreatic head and in patients with resectable cancer than in those with unresectable cancer. A combination of these two tests raised the diagnostic rate of pancreatic carcinoma to 77% without a remarkable decrease in the specificity for pancreatic carcinoma. In particular, it raised the diagnostic rates of cases of cancer of the pancreatic head, resectable cancer and cancers of less than 3.0 cm and 3.0-6.0 cm in longest diameter. Therefore, a combination of measurements of CEA and
elastase 1
in the serum is very useful for early detection of pancreatic carcinoma.
...
PMID:Values of serum carcinoembryonic antigen and elastase 1 in diagnosis of pancreatic carcinoma. 656 13
The patient was a 1-year-old infant with severe postencephalitis syndrome. Diarrhea and elevation of the pancreatic enzymes, except for serum amylase (
elastase 1
> 1, 5000 ng/dl (100-400); lipase, 885 IU/I/37 degrees C (10-48); trypsin, > 900 ng/ml (110-460)), were observed starting 70 days after starting valproate (dose, 70 mg/kg; serum level, 83.8 micrograms/ml). These findings as well as those obtained by abdominal ultrasonography suggested a diagnosis of
pancreatitis
, which was thought to be caused by sodium valproate. Important signs of valproate-induced
pancreatitis
may be easily overlooked in patients with neurological impairment, such as in ours. Because the blood half-life of amylase is short, not only amylase but some other pancreatic enzymes should be promptly investigated when valproate-related
pancreatitis
is clinically suspected in physically or mentally handicapped children.
...
PMID:Pancreatitis with normal serum amylase associated with sodium valproate: a case report. 757 66
We analyzed the serial changes in serum pancreatic enzyme activities by transcatheter arterial embolization (TAE) in 20 hepatoma patients with liver cirrhosis in an attempt to evaluate the incidence of the pancreatic tissue damage by TAE. Serum amylase activities increased in two (10%) cases,
elastase 1
levels in six (30%) cases, and trypsin and pancreatic secretory trypsin inhibitor (PSTI) levels in each of five (25%) cases. Consequently, TAE resulted in the elevation of at least more than one serum pancreatic enzyme in eight (40%) of 20 cases, although none had clinical symptoms related to
pancreatitis
. When the adverse effect on the pancreatic tissue was compared among 6 cases of the superselective TAE and 14 cases of the nonsuperselective TAE, which were performed from the segmental and the nonsegmental hepatic arteries, respectively, the elevation of serum pancreatic enzymes was caused only by nonsuperselective TAE, not by superselective TAE. The volumes of Spongel and Lipiodol used or the injected doses of the anticancer agent mitomycin C were not different between the two groups. These results indicate that TAE for the treatment of hepatoma frequently causes pancreatic tissue damage, and the position of the inserted catheter tip is very important to avoid the pancreatic tissue damage by TAE.
...
PMID:Pancreatic tissue damage by transcatheter arterial embolization for hepatoma. 767 84
Protein analysis of intraductal precipitates and calculi is important to elucidate the mechanism of stone formation in chronic pancreatitis. We revealed human cationic trypsin immunoreactivity in protein extracts of pancreatic stones from 11 of 13 patients with chronic calcified
pancreatitis
, ranging from 0 to 42.3 ng/micrograms protein. On gel filtration the immunoreactivity eluted as one peak, which is identical to that of human cationic trypsinogen. On immunostaining of pancreatic stone, using an immunogold technic and scanning electron microscopy, the immunoreactivity was observed more densely in the amorphous portion of the center of the stones than in the concentric laminar layer of the periphery. Only negligible activity was detected for
elastase 1
or amylase in the stone extracts. These results suggest that the presence of trypsinogen in pancreatic stone is not due to coprecipitation or adsorption of pancreatic enzymes but that trypsinogen is more likely involved in an initial step of intraductal precipitate formation than in a subsequent step of stone formation. However, the absence of trypsinogen in the stones from two of the 13 patients also suggests that trypsinogen is not the sole protein initiating precipitate formation.
...
PMID:Trypsin(ogen) content of pancreatic calculi in chronic calcified pancreatitis in man. 820 Feb 69
The elevation of plasma pancreatic elastase 1 in patients with pancreatic cancer is caused by concomitant
pancreatitis
. There is no report that pancreatic ductal cell carcinoma tissue itself produced
elastase 1
. A 54-year-old woman underwent total pancreatectomy for pancreatic ductal cell carcinoma. Her plasma
elastase 1
level subsequently decreased from the preoperative value of 406 ng/dl to values ranging between 96 ng/dl and 119 ng/dl, until 6 months after the operation, when it began to increase gradually to a maximum of 300 ng/dl in association with local recurrence and hepatic metastasis. Immunohistochemical staining of
elastase 1
was positive in the primary tumor resected at operation as well as in the locally recurrent and hepatic metastatic tumors obtained at autopsy. These findings suggested that
elastase 1
was produced by the tumor cells in this patient. This is the first case in which pancreatic ductal cell carcinoma cells produced
elastase 1
.
...
PMID:Pancreatic ductal cell carcinoma producing pancreatic elastase 1. 841 80
In the present study the time courses of serum lipase, serum amylase and serum
elastase 1
after ERCP/ES as indicators for pancreatic damage were prospectively analysed in 46 cases. The elevations of pancreatic enzymes after ERCP/ES scattered in a wide range and elevations occured which were greater than one hundred times the upper limit of normal. A moderate increment was seen as early as 5 minutes after intubation of the papilla. Elevations above the upper limit of normal were still seen at 24 hours after the procedure. The maxima occurred about 6 hours after the procedure. Lipase was the most sensitive among the parameters tested, nearly 50% of the cases with previously normal values revealed elevated lipase after the procedure. For daily clinical routine a single lipase measurement at 2 hours after the beginning of the ERCP/ES provides valuable information for planning further surveillance. Younger age and high calcium levels seem to be risk factors for ERCP/ES-induced pancreatic damage. The time course of serum lipase seems to be a more reliable criterion for ERCP/ES-induced pancreatic damage than the poorly defined complication of post-ERCP
pancreatitis
. The high incidence of a measurable pancreatic injury after ERCP/ES provides a sensitive tool for the testing of drugs claimed to be protective for the pancreas and for evaluating new ERCP/ES techniques. Measurement of the serum lipase before, 8 and 24 hours after the procedure, and a detailed description of degree and duration of pain, are necessary for such studies.
...
PMID:Evaluation of ERCP- and endoscopic sphincterotomy-induced pancreatic damage: a prospective study on the time course and the significance of serum levels of pancreatic secretory enzymes. 936 44
This study assessed the diagnostic accuracy of fecal
elastase 1
in chronic pancreatitis. Fifty-three healthy subjects, 44 patients with chronic pancreatitis (22 severe, 13 moderate, and 9 mild), and 43 patients with nonpancreatic digestive disease were studied. Elastase 1 concentration was determined on a small sample of feces using a commercially available kit. Fecal chymotrypsin was also measured. With a cutoff level of 190 microg/g, all healthy controls except one (98.1%), and the majority of patients with nonpancreatic digestive diseases (40 of 43; 93.0%) had elastase values above this limit. Among the 44 patients with chronic pancreatitis, 34 (77.3%) had pathological values: all 22 (100%) with severe disease, 10 of 13 (76.9%) with moderate disease and 2 of 9 (22.2%) with mild disease. Chymotrypsin values were pathological in 25 of 44 (56.8%) patients with chronic pancreatitis: 17 of 22 (77.2%) with severe
pancreatitis
, 7 of 13 (53.8%) with moderate
pancreatitis
, and 1 of 9 (11.1%) with mild disease. The specificity was 95.8% for
elastase 1
and 85.4% for chymotrypsin. The difference both in sensitivity and specificity of the two enzymes was statistically significant (P < 0.05). Fecal
elastase 1
has a high sensitivity, superior to that of fecal chymotrypsin, in the diagnosis of chronic pancreatitis. For its simplicity and rapidity, it could represent the tubeless test of choice in chronic pancreatitis.
...
PMID:Fecal elastase 1 determination in chronic pancreatitis. 1069 30
Hyperamylasemia after cardiac surgery is common but typically causes no clinical concern because it consists mainly of the salivary isoenzyme. In this study we evaluated the incidence, source, and time course of postoperative hyperamylasemia with special attention to the possibility of subclinical
pancreatitis
. In 88 patients prospectively tested for serum amylase and lipase concentrations,
elastase 1
activity, and amylase isoenzyme characteristics, 57 (64%) showed hyperamylasemia during the early postoperative period. In most cases early hyperamylasemia was not of pancreatic origin, but two patients were diagnosed with subclinical
pancreatitis
. Among the last 23 patients, 5 of 10 patients with early hyperamylasemia exceeding 1000 IU/L showed late hyperamylasemia on the seventh postoperative day, when it represented mainly the pancreatic isoenzyme. Lipase concentrations and
elastase 1
activities were elevated in these cases. Late hyperamylasemia following cardiac surgery may be of pancreatic origin and indicative of subclinical
pancreatitis
, even if early hyperamylasemia was of salivary origin.
...
PMID:Hyperamylasemia and subclinical pancreatitis after cardiac surgery. 1157 24
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