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Query: UMLS:C0030305 (
pancreatitis
)
16,014
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Fourteen pancreatic calculi from the corresponding number of pancreatic lithiasis patients were examined mineralogically and histochemically. The following results were obtained. The main components of calculi were calcium carbonate in 13 of the 14 cases, and calcium
phosphate
in the remaining one. Calcium carbonate calculi were all so-called intraductal calculi, with acidic glycoprotein apparently enwrapping the component particles. Acidic glycoproteins acted to bridge calcium carbonate particles, as in the cases of gallstone and urinary stone. The calcium
phosphate
calculus had a histochemical feature of pathologic calcification with degenerated collagen fibrils as the matrix, suggesting the calcification of the fibrotic pancreatic parenchyma after
pancreatitis
.
...
PMID:Histochemical studies of pancreatic calculi. 115 70
Fourteen cases of acute severe
pancreatitis
complicated by non-traumatic rhabdomyolysis are described and compared to case controls.
Pancreatitis
of various aetiologies was confirmed by surgical diagnosis, laparotomy, abdominal paracentesis, CAT scan and post mortem.
Pancreatitis
was severe with a high Ranson prognostic score (7.4 +/- 0.5 vs controls 1.9 +/- 0.4, p less than 0.001), longer ICU admission and a mortality of 79%. Rhabdomyolysis occurred two to 19 days after the onset of
pancreatitis
(with a median CPK peak at 6.5 days) and was accompanied by multiple organ failure in 93% of cases. Severe rhabdomyolysis and myoglobinuric renal failure occurred in three patients out of 12 with acute renal failure. Hypocalcaemia was common (93%), severe (with a mean minimum value of 1.79 +/- 0.07 vs 2.34 +/- 0.04mmol/L, p less than 0.01) and prolonged (remaining abnormal for 5.2 +/- 0.8 vs 0.07 +/- 0.07 days, p less than 0.001). Intravenous calcium supplements were required in 50% of patients. Plasma
phosphate
, potassium, urate and anion gap were elevated (all p less than 0.05) and accompanying clinical features included fever, ascites, leucocytosis, hypoalbuminaemia and abnormal liver function tests. Rhabdomyolysis is associated with acute several
pancreatitis
, appearing as a late phenomenon in the context of severe prolonged hypocalcaemia, multiple organ failure and a poor outcome.
...
PMID:Acute pancreatitis and rhabdomyolysis: a new association. 195 30
Previous studies using the isolated ex vivo perfused canine
pancreatitis
preparation showed that during a 4-hour perfusion
pancreatitis
(edema, weight gain, hyperamylasemia) can be induced by four different stimuli. The stimuli include the intra-arterial infusion of oleic acid (FFA), a 2-hour period of ischemia before perfusion (ISCH), partial obstruction of the pancreatic duct with secretin stimulation (POSS), and the intra-arterial infusion of cerulein at supramaximal doses (CER). In the present study, changes in high-energy
phosphate
metabolism, as determined by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, and changes in cellular structure, determined by light and electron microscopy, were documented for all four models of acute pancreatitis. The control preparations remained stable for the 4-hour perfusion period, with no decrease in adenosine triphosphate (ATP) levels. In the FFA preparations, ATP decreased to 36% of baseline levels during the 4-hour perfusion (p less than 0.001). In the ISCH preparations, ATP decreased to undetectable levels during the 2-hour period of ischemia, but recovered rapidly and remained at baseline levels during the perfusion. ATP levels remained stable in the remaining two models of
pancreatitis
(POSS, CER). Microscopy demonstrated that the initial injury was located chiefly in the capillaries (swollen endothelium, intravascular thrombi) in the FFA and ISCH preparations. In the POSS and CER preparations, capillary changes were minimal and the injury was located chiefly in the acinar cells (swollen endoplasmic reticulum, zymogen granule depletion, vacuolization). The POSS preparations also showed striking dilation of centroacinar lumens reflecting duct obstruction. In additional studies it was shown that the ATP decline in the FFA preparations could be significantly reduced by pretreatment with free radical scavengers. The morphologic changes could be reduced by free radical scavengers in the FFA and ISCH preparations. Any amelioration of morphologic injury in the POSS preparations was obscured by dilatation of centroacinar lumens in both treated and untreated groups. The morphologic changes in the CER preparations were reduced by treatment with a cholecystokinin inhibitor.
...
PMID:Changes in high-energy phosphate metabolism and cell morphology in four models of acute experimental pancreatitis. 200 16
Black and brown pigment gallstones are morphologically, compositionally, and clinically distinct. Black stones form primarily in the gallbladder in sterile bile and are associated with advanced age, chronic hemolysis, alcoholism, cirrhosis,
pancreatitis
, and total parenteral nutrition. Brown stones form not only within the gallbladder but also within the intrahepatic and extrahepatic ducts; they are uniformly infected with enteric bacteria and are usually associated with ascending cholangitis. Brown stones are related to juxtapapillary duodenal diverticula and are the predominant type of de novo common bile duct stones. Cholecystectomy is usually curative in black pigment stone disease, whereas stones often recur after cholecystectomy for brown stone disease. The pathogenesis of black stones is probably related to nonbacterial, nonenzymatic hydrolysis of bilirubin conjugates. At the pH of bile, this results in two monohydrogenated bilirubin anions that precipitate with calcium ions. Bilirubin monoconjugates that are increased in several conditions, such as Gilbert's syndrome and chronic hemolysis, may play a pivotal role in black stone formation as a source of unconjugated monohydrogenated bilirubin and as a possible co-precipitant with calcium. The precipitation of calcium carbonate and
phosphate
is influenced by local gallbladder factors. Brown pigment stones are formed in bile infected with enteric bacteria that elaborate hydrolytic enzymes: beta-glucuronidase, phospholipase A, and conjugated bile acid hydrolase. The resulting anions of bilirubin and fatty acids form insoluble calcium salts. We used nb/nb mice with a chronic hemolytic anemia as a model of hemolysis-induced black stone disease. The presence of 40% bilirubin monoconjugates in mouse gallstones indicated the importance of this moiety in the pathogenesis of black stones. Other data obtained by marrow transplantation experiments in mice revealed the relative importance of genotype versus the hemolytic anemia on determinants such as biliary bile acid composition and mucin secretory glands in the mouse gallbladder neck. Additional physical chemical studies of the interaction of unconjugated bilirubin in model bile solutions will be helpful in further delineating the pathogenesis of both black and brown pigment gallstones.
...
PMID:Pigment gallstone disease. 202 17
Indirect evidence suggests a causative role for intraperitoneal free fatty acids (FFA) in hypocalcemia associated with
pancreatitis
. We examined the effects of intraperitoneal injection of four naturally occurring FFAs on serum calcium in rats. Two saturated FFAs, stearate and palmitate, induced little or no hypocalcemia. Two unsaturated FFAs, oleate and linoleate, caused dramatic hypocalcemia in treated versus control rats (6.3 +/- 1.4 and 5.3 +/- 0.7 mg/dl, respectively, versus 10.1 +/- 0.6). Dose-response studies demonstrated that minute quantities of oleate (100 microliters per 250 g rat) caused marked hypocalcemia (7.2 +/- 0.3 mg/dl). Treated versus control rats also revealed a decrease in ionized calcium (3.15 +/- 0.2 versus 5.6 +/- 0.05 mg/dl) and magnesium (1.4 +/- 0.15 versus 2.0 +/- 0.10), an appropriate increase in PTH levels (1670 +/- 451 versus 396 +/- 235 pg/ml), and a fall in calcitonin levels (70.4 +/- 21.3 versus 47.5 +/- 16.4 pg/ml) but no change in albumin or
phosphate
levels. In vitro, the Ksp of calcium dioleate was shown to be 5.3 x 10(-8) m3/liter3; thus under physiologic conditions 100 microliters oleate binds 7.2 mg calcium, or approximately twice the total ECF ionized calcium in the rat. The amounts of intraperitoneal FFA that can easily be achieved in
pancreatitis
complex pathophysiologically significant amounts of calcium and may lead to severe hypocalcemia.
...
PMID:Intraperitoneal free fatty acids induce severe hypocalcemia in rats: a model for the hypocalcemia of pancreatitis. 207 38
Primary hypoparathyroidism caused by lymphocytic parathyroiditis was diagnosed in a cat. Other causes of hypocalcemia (ethylene glycol toxicosis,
phosphate
enema administration,
pancreatitis
, renal insufficiency, and malabsorption) were ruled out on the basis of history, clinicopathologic data, and lack of supportive clinical signs, which in this cat included inappetence and tetanic muscle spasms. The diagnosis was confirmed by histologic examination of a surgically excised thyroparathyroid lobe that comprised lack of recognizable parathyroid tissue and a lymphocytic plasmacytic infiltrate adjacent to the cranial pole. A treatment regimen similar to that for iatrogenic postthyroidectomy hypoparathyroidism was successful in controlling clinical signs of the disease.
...
PMID:Primary hypoparathyroidism in a cat. 233 77
Young female mice fed a choline-deficient, ethionine-supplemented (CDE) diet rapidly develop acute hemorrhagic
pancreatitis
. We have observed that pancreatic acini prepared from these mice are unable to secrete amylase in response to addition of the cholinergic agonist carbachol, although they retain the ability to secrete amylase in response to the Ca2+ ionophore A23187. The CDE diet does not alter the binding characteristics (Kd or the maximal number of binding sites) for muscarinic cholinergic receptors as tested using the antagonist [3H]N-methylscopolamine nor the competition for this binding by carbachol. Addition of carbachol to acini prepared from mice fed the CDE diet does not result in as marked an increase in cytosolic free Ca2+ levels as that noted in control samples (evaluated using quin2 fluorescence). These observations indicate that the CDE diet interferes with stimulus-secretion coupling in mouse pancreatic acini at a step subsequent to hormone-receptor binding and prior to Ca2+ release. This conclusion is confirmed by our finding that the hormone-stimulated generation of [3H]inositol phosphates (inositol trisphosphate, inositol bisphosphate, and inositol monophosphate) from acini labeled with [3H]myoinositol is markedly reduced in acini prepared from mice fed the CDE diet. This reduction is not due to a decrease in phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate. This communication represents the first report of a system in which a blockade of inositol
phosphate
generation can be related to a physiologic defect and pathologic lesion.
...
PMID:Diminished agonist-stimulated inositol trisphosphate generation blocks stimulus-secretion coupling in mouse pancreatic acini during diet-induced experimental pancreatitis. 242 12
Although parathormone primarily determines normal ionized serum calcium concentration [Ca++] over the long term, it has little impact in the acute situation. Nonhormonal changes in [Ca++] have been related to acute changes in serum pH, but these have been believed small. With use of an experimental model of acute pancreatitis, we measured changes in [Ca++] and related them to changes in other serum constituents known to affect it. All 18 animals studied experienced a decrease in total serum calcium concentration [CaT]. Changes in [CaT] correlated only with changes in protein-bound calcium concentration [CaP] (r = 0.98, p less than or equal to 0.0005). They did not correlate independently with changes in albumin, globulin, or total protein concentration. [CaP] varied as a function of albumin, globulin, and
phosphate
concentration and pH according to the equation: [CaP] = 17.9 +/- 0.89 [albumin] = 0.68 [globulin] - 2.5 pH + 0.12 [
phosphate
]. Calculated values for [CaP], when this equation was used, correlated strongly with observed values for [CaP] (r = 0.81, p less than or equal to 0.0005). Measured [Ca++] increased in the animals early during
pancreatitis
and then returned to baseline levels. A few animals experienced ionized hypocalcemia. [Ca++] correlated only with changes in pH (r = 0.87, p less than or equal to 0.02). The calculated response slope was delta [Ca++]/delta pH = -2.9. It is concluded that pH has a greater effect on [Ca++] than previously recognized. The major determinant of [CaT] during periods of rapid physiologic change appears to be [CaP] while that for [Ca++] is pH.
...
PMID:The role of pH in altering serum ionized calcium concentration. 340 67
Acute edematous
pancreatitis
was induced in cats by perfusing activated pancreatic enzymes through their pancreatic ducts. The ducts had been made permeable to large molecules by one of two techniques. The cats either received ethanol (2 ml/kg every 8 h) and aspirin (25 mg/kg every 8 h) orally for 48 h or had their pancreatic ducts perfused for 1 h with 7.5 mM glycodeoxycholate. When the same procedure was followed, but using 16,16-dimethyl prostaglandin E2 (dmPGE2) (2 micrograms/kg X h infused intravenously for 1 h before and during ductal perfusion with activated enzymes), hemorrhagic
pancreatitis
developed instead. To investigate whether an increase in pancreatic blood flow or microvascular permeability (both caused by dmPGE2) was important in this phenomenon, we tested the effects of isoproterenol (which increased blood flow) and histamine (which increased microvascular permeability) in the model. Thus in similar experiments, either isoproterenol (0.3 micrograms/kg . min) or histamine
phosphate
(2 micrograms/kg . min) was infused instead of dmPGE2. The animals that received histamine also developed hemorrhagic
pancreatitis
. Those that received isoproterenol did not. These observations suggested that an increase in microvascular permeability in the pancreas converted edematous
pancreatitis
to hemorrhagic
pancreatitis
. These findings suggest also that clinical studies using prostaglandins to treat patients with
pancreatitis
should be approached with caution.
...
PMID:A model of hemorrhagic pancreatitis in cats--role of 16,16-dimethyl prostaglandin E2. 394 Feb 52
To elucidate the mechanism of the hyperamylasaemia which is often found in diabetic ketoacidosis, 9 patients who were admitted in this disease state were studied. Blood samples were taken every 4 hours for the first 24 hours and thereafter daily for 7 days. Serum amylase concentration increased gradually in all patients, from 256 (65-1155) U/1 at the initial sampling to a maximum of 1160 (210-2670) U/1 20-24 hours later (p. greater than 0.01), median values with 95% confidence limits. Simultaneously, plasma inorganic
phosphate
concentrations decreased from a median value of 1.35 mmol/l to 0.45 mmol/l (p less than 0.01), and a significant negative correlation was found between the changes in these parameters in 5 patients. Isoenzyme analysis in 8 of the patients showed that hyperamylasaemia was of the "salivary type" in two and of the "pancreatic type" in two. None of the patients had clinical signs of
pancreatitis
. It is concluded that in diabetic ketoacidosis, the increase in serum amylase concentration observed in all patients is closely related to the action of insulin in the majority of these, and some possible mechanisms are discussed.
...
PMID:Serum amylase during recovery from diabetic ketoacidosis. 620 70
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