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Query: UMLS:C0030305 (
pancreatitis
)
16,014
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We evaluated the effects of a
protease inhibitor
on the progression of acute pancreatitis in rats. The model was selected and modified to mimic an intermediate stage of the disease. The degree of microcirculatory derangement in the pancrease and of lung edema was determined to assess the effects of gabexate mesilate (ethyl-4-(6-guanidinohexanoyloxy) benzoate methane sulfonate), a synthetic antiprotease, in acute pancreatitis. Male Sprague-Dawley rats (225-275 g) were used. Experimental
pancreatitis
was established by four intramuscular injections of cerulein (50 micrograms/kg) at 1 hour intervals. Lipopolysaccharide (10 mg/kg) was injected intraperitoneally as an acute septic challenge. Gabexate mesilate was infused intravenously 6 hours after the initiation of induction of acute pancreatitis at doses of 0.01, 0.1, 1, or 10 mg/kg/h. Microcirculatory changes in the pancreas were studied using in vivo microscopy. All animals survived until the end of the experiments. Gabexate mesilate significantly improved pathologic criteria and decreased serum lipase levels at doses of 1 and 10 mg/kg/h. It significantly lessened the severity of lung edema and improved the microcirculatory environment in the pancreas by increasing flow velocity and reducing leukocyte sticking. These results indicate the beneficial effects of gabexate mesilate on pancreatic microcirculation and lung edema in the progression of acute pancreatitis with septic challenge in rats.
...
PMID:Gabexate mesilate improves pancreatic microcirculation and reduces lung edema in a rat model of acute pancreatitis. 930 24
The role of oxygen-derived free radicals in
pancreatitis
after pancreas transplantation was examined in a porcine pancreatic transplantation model. Trypsin activation,
protease inhibitor
consumption, kininogen consumption, and postoperative graft function were investigated in 24 pigs subjected to whole organ pancreaticoduodenal transplantation. The animals were divided into one control group and two groups treated with free radical scavengers. One group was given allopurinol, and one group was treated with superoxide dismutase in combination with catalase. In the early phase (within 1 hr) after reperfusion, no differences were seen between the groups as to protease activation. Neither trypsin-
protease inhibitor
imbalance nor any signs of kininogen consumption were seen. In a later phase (1-3 days after the transplantation), the trypsin activation, measured as high molecular weight immunoreactive cationic trypsin in plasma, was significantly less pronounced in allopurinol-treated animals. This finding indicates a less severe form of reperfusion
pancreatitis
in this group compared with the other groups. A tendency toward better function in the allopurinol-treated group was also seen. We conclude that oxygen-derived free radicals seem to be of importance in the development of reperfusion
pancreatitis
after pancreas transplantation in the pig. We also conclude that allopurinol, but not superoxide dismutase/catalase, possibly due to the administration regimens used in this series, is able to attenuate the trypsin activation and the development of
pancreatitis
in the later phase in this model.
...
PMID:Role of oxygen-derived free radicals in protease activation after pancreas transplantation in the pig. 948 64
Pancreatitis
induced by ligation of the pancreatic duct produces morphologic similarities to human
pancreatitis
. This model is easily performed in big animals, but it is very difficult to perform pancreatic duct ligation in small animals. Many experimental studies of pharmaceutical treatments for
pancreatitis
used pancreatic duct-ligation models, but it is also difficult to evaluate the efficacy of the drugs used, because the animals used are of different species with individual differences. To overcome these problems, we ligated the main pancreatic duct of the splenic lobe by a 5.0 absorbable suture by using a surgical microscope and left the gastroduodenal lobe intact in the same rats. This model produced damaged pancreatic tissue in one part and normal pancreatic tissue in another part of the pancreas in the same animals, biochemically and histologically. We evaluated the effect of a new
protease inhibitor
(ONO-3404) on this preliminary model and found this new
protease inhibitor
demonstrated a hypertrophic effect on the damaged pancreatic tissue and the normal pancreatic tissue in the same animals. This model is also useful to study pharmaceutic treatment for pancreatic insufficiency and to study chemically induced pancreatic carcinogenesis in the damaged pancreatic tissue and the normal pancreatic tissue in the same animals.
...
PMID:A new model for pancreatitis. 954 68
A cooperative national survey between 1991 and 1994 recently clarified the status of acute necrotizing
pancreatitis
in Japan. The overall mortality rate was 20.8%; however, the mortality rate in patients with infection was 33.3%, and the mortality rate in patients who underwent surgery was 27.4%. With regard to surgical procedures, drainage procedures (mobilization of the pancreatic bed and retroperitoneal drainage) were performed most frequently, and one third of the patients who underwent drainage procedures needed reoperation. Although debridement of the necrotic tissue (necrosectomy or resection of the pancreas) was performed in 33.3%, the mortality rate was 35.3%. There was no difference in the mortality rate between early and delayed operation. Recently two new modalities have been advocated for the management of severe acute pancreatitis in Japan. One is continuous regional arterial infusion of
protease inhibitor
and antibiotics, and the other is continuous hemodiafiltration. Further work is needed to establish the most effective procedures for the management of acute necrotizing
pancreatitis
and debridement of pancreatic infection.
...
PMID:Surgical aspects and management of acute necrotizing pancreatitis: recent results of a cooperative national survey in Japan. 954 73
The mortality rate in acute pancreatitis (AP) is significantly lower in patients hospitalized directly at the intensive care unit than in patients admitted to hospital in 2 weeks after the assessment of diagnosis, prophylactic administration of low-molecular
protease inhibitor
reduces the occurrence of post ERCP
pancreatitis
a well a coincident complications. Despite rational considerations concerning the significance of pryphylactic administration of antibodies (ATB) in severe AP, there still not enough convincing data which could be recommended a standard therapy. One of the concepts of causal therapy of AP. Suggest that inhibition of exocrine pancreatic enzymatic secretion reduces autodigestion of the gland (setting the gland at rest). The reports on success of secretin-inhibiting substances a glucagon, calcitonin, atropine and somatostatin require confirmation in randomized or accurately defined comparable groups. The initial studies on the therapeutic significance of lexipanphate-antagonist of platelet activating factor (PAF) in acute pancreatitis is promising. A long-term lavage had reduced the mortality.
...
PMID:[Therapy of acute pancreatitis]. 972 66
The pathological activation of zymogens within the pancreatic acinar cell plays a role in acute pancreatitis. To identify the processing site where activation occurs, antibodies to the trypsinogen activation peptide (TAP) were used in immunofluorescence studies using frozen sections from rat pancreas. Saline controls or animals receiving caerulein in amounts producing physiological levels of pancreatic stimulation demonstrated little or no TAP immunoreactivity. However, after caerulein hyperstimulation (5 micrograms. kg-1. h-1) for 30 min and the induction of
pancreatitis
, TAP immunoreactivity appeared in a vesicular, supranuclear compartment that demonstrated no overlap with zymogen granules. The number of vesicles and their size increased with time. After 60 min of hyperstimulation with caerulein, most of the TAP reactivity was localized within vacuoles >/=1 micrometer that demonstrated immunoreactivity for the granule membrane protein GRAMP-92, a marker for lysosomes and recycling endosomes. Pretreatment with the
protease inhibitor
FUT-175 blocked the appearance of TAP after hyperstimulation. These studies provide evidence that caerulein hyperstimulation stimulates trypsinogen processing to trypsin in distinct acinar cell compartments in a time-dependent manner.
...
PMID:Codistribution of TAP and the granule membrane protein GRAMP-92 in rat caerulein-induced pancreatitis. 981 30
This paper reviewed our experience with the nonsurgical management of acute necrotizing
pancreatitis
(ANP) by continuous regional arterial infusion (CRAI) of
protease inhibitor
(nafamostat mesilate, 240 mg/day) and antibiotic (imipenem, 0.5 g every 12 h). 47 patients with ANP admitted within 7 days were treated with intensive care and CRAI for 5 days prospectively. 40 patients responded to CRAI therapy and the mortality rate in these patients was 2.5%. 7 patients (14. 9%) did not respond to CRAI. 5 of 7 nonresponders died of multiple organ failure although pancreatic necrosis was persistently sterile. The remaining 2 patients who underwent necrosectomy for infected pancreatic necrosis recovered after surgery. In 34 patients treated with CRAI in the early stage within 72 h after the onset, 31 (91.2%) responded. The mortality rate was 5.9% and the incidence of infected pancreatic necrosis was 2.9% in these 34 patients. These results demonstrated that most patients with ANP responded to conservative management combined with CRAI with nafamostat and imipenem when employed within 72 h after the onset. Early intervention of CRAI with
protease inhibitor
and antibiotic has a significant role in the nonsurgical management of ANP.
...
PMID:Role of early continuous regional arterial infusion of protease inhibitor and antibiotic in nonsurgical treatment of acute necrotizing pancreatitis. 1002 24
The mechanisms responsible for intrapancreatic digestive enzyme activation as well as the relationship between that activation and cell injury during
pancreatitis
are not understood. We have employed an in vitro system in which freshly prepared pancreatic acini are exposed to a supramaximally stimulating concentration of the CCK analog caerulein to explore these issues. We find that in vitro trypsinogen activation depends on the continued presence of Ca2+ in the suspending medium and that it is half-maximal in the presence of 0.3 mM Ca2+. Caerulein-induced trypsinogen activation can be halted by removal of Ca2+ from the suspending medium or by chelation of intracellular Ca2+. Increasing intracellular Ca2+ with either ionomycin or thapsigargin does not induce trypsinogen activation. We have monitored cell injury by measuring the leakage of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) from acini and by quantitating intercalation of propidium iodide (PI) into DNA. Leakage of LDH and intercalation of PI in response to supramaximal stimulation with caerulein can be detected only after caerulein-induced trypsinogen activation has already occurred, and these indications of cell injury can be prevented by addition of a cell-permeant
protease inhibitor
. Our findings indicate that caerulein-induced intra-acinar cell activation of trypsinogen depends on a rise in intracellular Ca2+, which reflects entry of Ca2+ from the suspending medium. Intra-acinar cell activation of trypsinogen is an early as well as a critical event in
pancreatitis
. The subsequent cell injury in this model is mediated by activated proteases.
...
PMID:Secretagogue-induced digestive enzyme activation and cell injury in rat pancreatic acini. 1019 25
The preventive effect of a novel synthetic serine protease inhibitor, sepimostat mesilate (sepimostat), on acute alcohol pancreatic injury, induced by exocrine hyperstimulation and ethanol administration, was assessed and compared with that of a similar
protease inhibitor
, camostat mesilate (camostat). Conscious rats were infused with 1 microg mL(-1) h(-1) caerulein intravenously for 6 h and with 0.1 g mL(-1) h(-1) ethanol for 9 h, with the latter infusion beginning 3 h after the start of the caerulein infusion. Sepimostat or camostat was administered orally 1 h before the caerulein infusion. Rats infused with caerulein plus ethanol showed increased plasma amylase and lipase activities, and aggravated pancreatic interstitial oedema when compared with rats given caerulein alone. Sepimostat at 10 and 30 mg kg(-1) prevented the increase in plasma amylase and lipase activities caused by caerulein plus ethanol infusion. Sepimostat at 30 mg kg(-1) suppressed the histological change. Camostat did not show any preventive effects at the equivalent dose. When conscious rats were infused with 1 microg mL(-1) h(-1) caerulein alone intravenously for 6 h, plasma amylase and lipase activities were increased compared with rats given saline. Neither drug prevented the increase in these activities at 30mg kg(-1). Our results suggest that sepimostat has superior preventive effects on alcohol-induced acute pancreatic injury compared with camostat. Sepimostat may thus be a useful drug in the therapy of alcohol-induced
pancreatitis
.
...
PMID:Oral administration of sepimostat mesilate prevents acute alcohol pancreatic injury in rats. 1046 64
We used a vascular access system (VAS) for continuous arterial infusion (CAI) of a
protease inhibitor
in two patients with acute necrotizing
pancreatitis
. The infusion catheter was placed into the dorsal pancreatic artery in the first patient and into the gastroduodenal artery in the second, via a femoral artery approach. An implantable port was then connected to the catheter and was secured in a subcutaneous pocket prepared in the right lower abdomen. No complications related to the VAS were encountered. This system provided safe and uncontaminated vascular access for successful CAI for acute pancreatitis.
...
PMID:Vascular access system for continuous arterial infusion of a protease inhibitor in acute necrotizing pancreatitis. 1050 1
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