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

Bladder drainage of exocrine secretions during pancreas transplantation can be associated with significant complications. We present a proactive approach to these complications consisting of early cystoenteric conversion (CEC). Although 81 patients underwent pancreas transplant between March 1985 and May 1995; 26 (32%) required CEC. Complications presented as urine leaks, other complications, and refractory metabolic acidosis. There were 13 patients who presented with a urine leak: 12 with acute abdominal pain, and 1 asymptomatic. Serum amylase and creatinine rose a mean of 823 IU and 0.61 mg/dl, respectively. The interval to CEC ranged from 2 to 45 months. One patient died of fungal sepsis. Postoperative complications included duodenojejunal anastomotic bleed (n = 1), negative relaparotomy (n = 1), myocardial infarction (n = 1), graft pancreatitis (n = 1), and wound infection (n = 1). Twelve patients presented with other complications: three women with cystitis (n = 2) or hematuria (n = 1), and nine men with urethritis (n = 6), scrotal edema (n = 2), or dysuria (n = 1), The interval to conversion ranged from 1 to 108 months. There were no deaths. One patient required relaparotomy for anastomotic bleed. One patient was converted because of refractory metabolic acidosis. Admissions and inpatient days were significantly reduced. Overall mortality was 3.8%, morbidity 23.1%, and graft salvage rate 96.1%. Leak-associated mortality was 7.7%, morbidity 38.5%, and graft salvage rate 92.3%. For other complications the mortality was 0, morbidity 7.7%, and graft salvage rate 100%. CEC is a safe, effective treatment for urologic complications of pancreas transplantation. Morbidity and mortality were acceptable; admissions and hospital days were decreased. Early CEC results in superior outcomes and improved quality of life. It is preferable to nondefinitive measures for management of urologic complications of pancreatic transplantation.
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PMID:Early operative intervention for urologic complications of kidney-pancreas transplantation. 967 65

Abdominal pain is among the most frequent ailments reported in the office setting and can account for up to 40% of ailments in the ambulatory practice. Also, it is in the top three symptoms of patients presenting to emergency departments (ED) and accounts for 5-10% of all ED primary presenting ailments. There are several common sources for acute abdominal pain and many for subacute and chronic abdominal pain. This article explores the history-taking, initial evaluation, and examination of the patient presenting with acute abdominal pain. The goal of this article is to help differentiate one source of pain from another. Discussion of acute cholecystitis, pancreatitis, appendicitis, ectopic pregnancy, diverticulitis, gastritis, and gastroenteritis are undertaken. Additionally, there is discussion of common laboratory studies, diagnostic studies, and treatment of the patient with the above entities.
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PMID:Acute abdominal pain. 970 80

Acute pancreatitis is only rarely the first presentation of a cystic neoplasm of the pancreas. Mucinous cystadenomas have not been reported to be a cause of acute pancreatitis; however, we present two cases of mucinous cystadenoma of the pancreas which have caused acute pancreatitis. Both patients (female) presented acute abdominal pain, with serum amylase elevation and ultrasound scan (US) and computed tomography (CT) evidence of moderate pancreatitis, which resolved with medical treatment; fluid collection in the distal pancreas had been misinterpreted as a pseudocyst. There was no history of alcohol abuse or gallstone disease. After distal pancreatectomy the diagnosis of mucinous cystadenoma was confirmed; in one case a large pseudocyst was associated with this diagnosis. Pre-operative differential diagnosis between inflammatory and neoplastic cysts is difficult, especially when the patient's first presentation is due to an episode of acute pancreatitis. A neoplastic cyst should be considered when acute pancreatitis attacks occur in non-alcoholic women, who do not have gallstone disease.
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PMID:Mucinous cystadenoma of the pancreas as a cause of acute pancreatitis. 995 36

We report a patient admitted with acute abdominal pain initially thought to be due to pancreatitis of unclear etiology. Later during his hospitalization he was diagnosed with primary varicella infection. The association between varicella and systemic multiorgan disease needs to be recognized in both immunocompetent and immunocompromised patients. A prompt diagnosis prevents delay in the treatment of varicella, as well as in monitoring for and preventing complications of disseminated infection.
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PMID:Primary disseminated varicella presenting as an acute abdomen. 1038 77

Acute pancreatitis is a very uncommon presenting feature of multiple myeloma. We report an elderly non-alcoholic man presenting with acute abdominal pain and rapidly progressing renal failure. Investigations revealed lytic lesions in the vertebrae and skull, M band on urine electrophoresis, and radiological and biochemical evidence of acute pancreatitis. The patient died despite conservative management of the pancreatitis.
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PMID:Multiple myeloma presenting as acute pancreatitis. 1040 73

The presence of macroamylasemia should be considered in the differential diagnosis of hyperamylasemia associated with acute abdominal pain, with suspect of pancreatitis. This uncommon and poorly known abnormality is defined as a blinding of serum amylase to certain proteins forming a circulating macrocomplex which prevents renal clearance of serum amylase. Two clinical cases as well as a review of this rare entity are here reported.
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PMID:[Macroamylasemia in the differential diagnosis of acute pancreatitis]. 1048 60

We present a rare case of acute pancreatitis associated with temporal lobectomy due to intractable seizure in a 23-year-old man. The patient underwent elective right temporal lobectomy and hippocampectomy. Severe upper abdominal pain occurred just 10 hours after surgery. The diagnosis of acute pancreatitis was based on the elevation of serum amylase and lipase levels, and the findings of abdominal computerized tomography. Other possible causative factors of acute pancreatitis including alcohol, biliary tract stone, hypertriglyceridemia, hypercalcemia, hyperparathyroidism, biliary dysmotility and autoimmune disease were excluded by a series of examinations. The possibility of drug-induced pancreatitis was very low in this patient. The patient was discharged after supportive treatment. No recurrence of seizure or abdominal pain was noted in the three months after discharge. Acute abdominal pain after brain surgery deserves clinical evaluation for acute pancreatitis.
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PMID:Acute pancreatitis associated with temporal lobectomy and intractable seizure. 1074 19

Acute abdominal pain in chronic hemodialysis patients has well-known causes, including acute pancreatitis, mesenteric arterial insufficiency, or complicated duodenal ulcer. Others, such as hemoperitoneum, are far less common. Although hemoperitoneum occurs in patients receiving peritoneal dialysis, dialysis is seldom if ever the direct cause of the bleeding. Hemoperitoneum is often related to menses or ovulation, particularly to ovarian cyst rupture; therefore, it is more common in young women. In most cases, no specific treatment is required. Hemoperitoneum is rarely considered as the cause of acute abdominal pain in chronic hemodialysis patients. In this report of hemoperitoneum confirmed by emergency laparotomy in 3 women, bleeding was not related to gynecologic origin. All of the women were younger than age 50 and undergoing long-term hemodialysis. All patients had a history of acute abdominal pain associated with shock. The cause of bleeding was always an organ lesion: hepatic amyloidosis with suspected portal hypertension or sclerosing peritonitis and acute hemorrhagic pancreatitis. Coagulation abnormalities and the use of anticoagulants during hemodialysis sessions may have been aggravating factors in all three patients. Hemoperitoneum is difficult to diagnose, particularly in the minor forms, and consequently its incidence may be underestimated. Therefore, it should be considered whenever a chronic hemodialysis patient presents with persistent acute abdominal pain.
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PMID:Hemoperitoneum in patients receiving hemodialysis. 1092 32

A total of 3,727 in-patients with acute abdominal symptoms were identified during the first quarter of 1995 at the surgical clinics of the nine hospitals with emergency departments in the county of Stockholm. The diagnoses were: non-specific abdominal pain 24%; cholecystitis 9%; appendicitis 8%; bowel obstruction 7%; intra-abdominal malignancy, diseases of the urinary tract and peptic ulcer 6% each; gastrointestinal hemorrhage, diverticulitis of the colon and pancreatitis 5% each; other diseases as a cause of abdominal symptoms, 19%. 1,601 operations were performed of which 47% were endoscopic procedures. The mean duration of hospital stay was 4.8 days. The length of stay increased significantly with age. The age-related relative frequency of hospitalization due to acute abdominal pain was also dramatically higher in the elderly cohorts. These facts and the prognosis of an 18% increase of inhabitants 50 years of age or older until 2010 in Greater Stockholm signal an increased need of hospital resources for this large group of patients in the coming years.
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PMID:[Acute abdomen calls for considerable care resources. Analysis of 3727 in-patients in the county of Stockholm during the first quarter of 1995]. 1103 59

In this study we determined the clinical accuracy of alpha2-macroglobulin, alpha-amylase, C-reactive protein, lipase, non-esterified fatty acids, pancreatic alpha-amylase and phospholipase A in the diagnosis and prognosis of acute pancreatitis in a group of patients with acute abdominal pain using receiver operator characteristic curve analysis. We investigated 59 patients with acute pancreatitis and 72 patients with extrapancreatic diseases of gastrointestinal origin. On the basis of initial enzyme activities, at cut-offs of 245 U/l for amylase, 656 U/l for lipase, and 182 U/l for pancreatic alpha-amylase, the diagnostic efficiencies were 0.993, 0.980, and 0.975, respectively. Receiver operator characteristic curve analysis showed the same diagnostic accuracies. We evaluated the accuracy of serum alpha2-macroglobulin, C-reactive protein, non-esterified fatty acids and phospholipase A for differentiation between acute necrotizing pancreatitis and acute oedematous pancreatitis. C-reactive protein had the highest prognostic accuracy of the parameters studied (the area under curve = 0.9082) and at a cut-off value of 126 mg/l, sensitivity and specificity were 0.759 and 0.912, respectively. The role of the clinical laboratory in the investigation of patients with acute pancreatitis continues to evolve and biochemical parameters are a good diagnostic and prognostic option.
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PMID:Biochemical evaluation of patients with acute pancreatitis. 1115 45


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