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

Overexpression of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) has been reported as an important molecular abnormality in human pancreatic cancer. There is in vitro evidence that simultaneous overproduction of one of its ligands, transforming growth factor alpha (TGF-alpha), might result in an autocrine loop with an increased proliferation signal. We analysed by immunocytochemical staining a retrospective series of human pancreatic cancers, chronic pancreatitis, and normal fetal and adult pancreatic tissues for the presence of TGF-alpha and epidermal growth factor (EGF). Ductal epithelial cells showed TGF-alpha immunoreactivity in both normal tissue and chronic pancreatitis, and 95 per cent of tumours showed strong immunoreactivity. In contrast, EGF immunoreactivity was not found in normal pancreas, but was expressed in 12 per cent of pancreatic carcinomas. Well-defined areas of EGF immunoreactivity in exocrine ducts showing reactive changes in pancreatitis might represent a benign response to tissue damage similar to that previously described in the gastric mucosa.
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PMID:Transforming growth factor alpha and epidermal growth factor in human pancreatic cancer. 170 59

The role of operative intervention for hereditary pancreatitis, a rare form of chronic parenchymal destruction, is unclear. To determine whether surgical therapy is safe and provides prolonged symptomatic relief, the authors reviewed the management of 22 adults (11 men, 11 women) with hereditary pancreatitis treated surgically between 1950 and 1989. Hereditary pancreatitis was defined as a family history of two or more relatives with pancreatitis and clinical, biochemical, or radiologic evidence of pancreatitis. The mean ages at onset of symptoms and at operation were 15 years (range, 3 to 52 years) and 31 years (range, 18 to 54 years), respectively. Pain was the primary indication for operation in all patients. Additional symptoms included nausea, vomiting (73%), weight loss (55%), and diarrhea (41%). Ductal dilatation was present in 68%, pancreatic parenchymal calcifications in 73%, pseudocysts in 36%, and splenic vein thrombosis in 18%. Primary operations included ductal drainage in 10 patients, pancreatic resection alone in three, resection with drainage in three, cholecystectomy plus sphincteroplasty in two, cholecystectomy with or without common bile duct exploration in two, pancreatic abscess drainage in one, and pseudocyst drainage in one. There were no perioperative deaths, and the morbidity rate was 14% (intra-abdominal abscess, wound infection, and urinary tract infection). Symptoms recurred in nine patients. Severity prompted reoperation in five. Secondary operations included pancreatic resection in three, pseudocyst excision in one, and pancreaticolithotomy in one. Follow-up to date is complete and extends for a median of 85 months. Eighteen patients (82%) are clinically improved or asymptomatic. Symptoms have persisted in four patients, and two patients have died of pancreatic carcinoma. Two patients died of unrelated causes. Surgical therapy for patients with hereditary pancreatitis selected on the basis of the traditional indications for surgical treatment of chronic pancreatitis is safe and efficacious.
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PMID:The surgical spectrum of hereditary pancreatitis in adults. 173 48

Five patients with severe acute pancreatitis (AP) underwent subtotal pancreatectomy, and six patients with advanced chronic pancreatitis (CP) were subjected to pancreatic resection. Microangiography and histological studies were performed on the resected pancreata. All patients with AP had histologically verified necrotizing pancreatitis. Pancreatic ducts in the necrotic areas had severe inflammation in their walls and a decrease in their vascularity. The ductal walls of CP patients were indistinguishable from the surrounding fibrosis and the vascular supply of the ducts was markedly diminished. The vessels were reduced in number, and their calibers varied considerably. Ductal ischemia in connection with AP and CP is discussed.
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PMID:Vascular changes of pancreatic ducts and vessels in acute necrotizing, and in chronic pancreatitis in humans. 203 15

In an attempt to determine the natural history of ductal adenocarcinoma of the pancreas in patients under 40 years of age, we reviewed the surgical outcomes of all such patients seen at the Mayo Clinic from 1970 to 1985. Histologic sections were reviewed; islet cell tumors and cystadenocarcinomas were carefully excluded. Twenty-six patients were identified. Their mean age was 34 years, with only one patient less than 25 years old. Symptoms included primarily abdominal pain, weight loss, and jaundice. One third of patients had a recent or past history of pancreatic disease including pancreatitis, pseudocysts, benign cystadenoma, and choledochal cyst. The tumor was located in the head of the gland in 62% of patients. "Curative" resections were possible in only three patients (12%); the remaining patients underwent palliative bypass (38%), biopsy alone (42%), or a palliative resection (8%). The hospital mortality rate was 12%, with actual 1-, 2-, and 5-year survival rates of 19%, 8%, and 4%, respectively, with a median survival of 4 months. The only long-term survivor underwent biliary bypass at age 15 years for a large neoplasm in the head of the gland; despite biopsy-proved liver metastases at that time, she continues to do well 5 years later. Histologic review indicated this tumor to be a "solid and papillary neoplasm of the pancreas." Ductal adenocarcinoma of the pancreas in young patients is an aggressive tumor with a poor prognosis behaving much like ductal adenocarcinoma in older patients (greater than 40 years). In rare instances a more favorable outcome can be expected when a solid and papillary neoplasm is found.
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PMID:Nonendocrine cancer of the pancreas in patients under age forty years. 216 85

Twenty of 510 patients with common bile duct (CBD) stone underwent needle knife precut papillotomy after conventional papillotomy failed because of impacted ampullary stone. This facilitated deep cannulation and subsequent standard papillotomy in 12 patients. In four patients, the precut papillotomy was extended, resulting in spontaneous expulsion of stone. Bleeding precluded stone extraction in three patients, and these stones were removed at a second ERCP session. Ductal clearance was achieved in all except one patient who underwent surgical removal of the impacted stone. Mild bleeding occurred in four patients and was successfully controlled by endoscopic adrenalin injection. There was no perforation, pancreatitis, or exacerbation of cholangitis following the procedure.
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PMID:Precut (needle knife) papillotomy for impacted common bile duct stone at the ampulla. 237 28

Dogs which had received cyclosporine A for immunosuppression were investigated to elucidate functionality and morphological alterations in pancreas allografts, with enteral, vesical, peritoneal or occluded exocrine drainage. None of the animals with enteral drainage survived the first four postoperative weeks, with lethal infections being responsible for allograft failure. Full functionality three months from transplantation was recorded from three of seven transplants with ductal occlusion and unobstructed drainage into the abdominal cavity. Ductal occlusion was repeatedly accompanied by pancreatitis and pseudo-cysts. Fibrotisation of the organ and loss of endocrine islets of pancreas were recordable from these cases just as from grafts with unobstructed drainage into the abdominal cavity. Drainage of exocrine secretion into the bladder yielded good success in one of seven animals and was morphologically and functionally characterised primarily by occlusive metaplastic ossification along the transition to the anastomosis.
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PMID:[Function and morphology of intraperitoneal segmental pancreas allotransplants with cyclosporin monotherapy in the dog--a comparison of 4 drainage procedures of exocrine secretions]. 246 80

Endoscopic ultrasonography (EUS) was performed in 40 patients with pancreatic masses who subsequently underwent surgical resection, and we compared the ultrasonograms with the histopathologic findings. Ductal adenocarcinoma: The cephalad margin between the tumor and pancreatic tissue was distinct, while the caudal margin was blurred because the severe fibrosis accompanying secondary pancreatitis, and the contour of the tumor was irregular. The internal echo pattern was hypoechoic, with an uneven central echogenic portion corresponding to irregularly arranged carcinomatous canaliculi or coagulation necrosis. Benign islet cell tumor: Both the cephalad and caudal margins were distinct, the contour was smooth and the internal echo pattern was hypoechoic, with a homogeneous central echogenic portion corresponding to regularly arranged alveoli. Pseudotumorous pancreatitis: The caudal margin was indistinct, the contour was smooth, and the internal echo pattern was homogeneously hypoechoic, with deep attenuation caused by dense fibrosis. On the basis of these results, it is believed that EUS with its high resolution is useful in the differential diagnosis of pancreatic mass lesions.
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PMID:Clinicopathologic analysis of endoscopic ultrasonograms in pancreatic mass lesions. 254 35

Chronic intermittent abdominal pain in childhood, reported to afflict nine to 12 per cent of all children, is an enigma of such magnitude that more than 30 per cent of these patients reach adulthood with persistent problems and no definitive diagnosis. This report discusses 20 children with such pain (9 girls and 11 boys) in whom routine diagnostic evaluation failed to identify the etiology. Selected special diagnostic studies and considerable suspicion for chronic pancreatitis prompted surgical intervention in three patients. Two were unsuspected and identified at celiotomy as having pancreatitis. The morphine-neostigmine evocative test, modified in some cases to confirm its usefulness, was helpful, accurate, and definitive in all 13 patients on whom it was used. Eighteen patients were confirmed surgically to have pancreatic disease, and two patients are unoperated with continued pancreatic pain. Ductal pathology was believed present in all. Of 18 patients operated, 11 patients are asymptomatic, five patients are improved, and two patients are considered failures 6 months to 10 years following surgery.
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PMID:Chronic relapsing pancreatitis in childhood. 258 Apr 66

The operative experience of 23 patients with chronic or chronic relapsing pancreatitis who underwent ductal drainage is reviewed. All of those studied were treated for pain directly related to their pancreatitis and had no evidence of pseudocyst. Each patient was followed up for a minimum of 5 years postoperatively. In those persons with a diffusely dilated duct or "chain of lakes" pattern seen on ERCP, ductal drainage was preferred to pancreatic resection because of lower mortality and preservation of endocrine function. Internal ductal drainage as described by Partington, Rochelle, and Thal was the procedure of choice because it provides excellent pain relief and splenectomy is not required. Good or excellent long-term pain relief was achieved in 90% of patients undergoing operative intervention. Ductal drainage was frequently complicated by peptic ulcer disease. Postoperative antacid or histamine blocker therapy is recommended.
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PMID:Ductal drainage for chronic pancreatitis. 291 77

A postmortem study by ductography and histology was performed on 69 human pancreata with no clinical or histological signs of chronic pancreatitis. The ductograms, supplemented by five postmortem ductograms of chronic pancreatitis, were independently evaluated by six clinicians, skilled in ERCP; the degree of alteration was estimated by simple rating, forced choice rating, and by determination of the grade of chronic pancreatitis, Histologically, the amount of intraductal epithelial proliferation, periductal, intralobular and perilobular fibrosis, intraductal protein plugs, and fat necrosis was determined by semiquantitative methods. The six ductographical evaluations significantly differed in the level of their data, but corresponded in the range of distribution. All evaluations were correct regarding judgement of ductograms from patients with chronic pancreatitis. Ductograms of patients without chronic pancreatitis, however, were also frequently classified as chronic pancreatitis; overall 81% (minimal 37%, moderate 33%, severe 11%). This high level of false positive diagnosis indicates the frequency of pancreatitis like lesions in the main duct and its side branches in patients without chronic pancreatitis. Ductal lesions were significantly correlated with perilobular fibrosis. This finding favours the assumption, that in the non-inflamed pancreas, perilobular fibrosis plays a key-role in the development of ductal alterations, as in chronic pancreatitis. Perilobular fibrosis may result from intralobular inflammation caused by age-dependent intraductal epithelial hyperplasia.
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PMID:Comparative radiological and morphological study of human pancreas. Pancreatitis like changes in postmortem ductograms and their morphological pattern. Possible implication for ERCP. 397 13


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