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Query: UMLS:C0030305 (
pancreatitis
)
16,014
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
An example of acute pancreatitis developing five weeks after initial treatment with 5-aminosalicylic acid (5-ASA) and methylprednisolone for severe Crohn's disease is reported in a 37 year old female patient. She had undergone cholecystectomy for gall stones some years earlier. There was no evidence of acute or chronic pancreatitis. No morphological changes of the upper gastrointestinal tract were found except for some irregularity of the main pancreatic duct and the secondary ducts on endoscopic retrograde pancreatography. Rechallenge with 5-
ASA
did not induce recurrent
pancreatitis
or changes in pancreatic enzymes. This case report supports the concept of an association between acute pancreatitis and Crohn's disease.
...
PMID:Acute pancreatitis complicating Crohn's disease: mere coincidence or causality? 138 73
Sulphasalazine is an active agent in the treatment of chronic inflammatory bowel disease, but there are a number of well-known side effects, including
pancreatitis
. The newer 5-
ASA
agents are thought to be equally effective but less toxic. Here we describe a patient who developed a
pancreatitis
due to mesalamine; this was confirmed at rechallenge.
...
PMID:Pancreatitis induced by mesalamine. 140 43
There is a growing body of experimental and clinical evidence to suggest that oral or rectal administration of 5-
ASA
or 5-
ASA
conjugates is associated with significant adverse side effects including
pancreatitis
, hepatitis, and renal toxicity. The objective of this study was to assess the ability of 5-
ASA
to interact with low-molecular-weight iron to yield oxygen-derived free radicals and to determine whether these oxidants could damage model biological compounds. We found that 5-
ASA
was very effective at chelating ferric iron (Fe3+), and it rapidly reduced Fe3+ to the ferrous form (Fe2+). Addition of the 5-
ASA
/Fe2+ chelate to solutions containing polyunsaturated fatty acids or deoxyribose resulted in lipid peroxidation and oxidative carbohydrate degradation, respectively. These results are consistent with the formation of the highly reactive (and cytotoxic) hydroxyl radical. Formation of this free radical species was confirmed by the ability of hydroxyl radical scavengers (dimethyl sulfoxide, dimethyl thiourea) to inhibit the 5-
ASA
/Fe-mediated oxidative reactions. Maximum hydroxyl radical formation was achieved at a 5-
ASA
-to-Fe3+ ratio of 1.0 (20 microM 5-
ASA
and 20 microM Fe3+). Increasing this ratio significantly inhibited OH. formation with a concomitant reduction in lipid peroxidation and deoxyribose degradation. Finally, we demonstrated that 5-
ASA
promotes the reductive release of Fe3+ from ferritin. Data obtained in this study suggest that 5-
ASA
may, under certain conditions, promote the formation of potentially injurious free radical species. These oxidative reactions may contribute to some of the adverse side effects known to be associated with the newer preparations of 5-
ASA
.
...
PMID:Prooxidant properties of 5-aminosalicylic acid. Possible mechanism for its adverse side effects. 150 90
The effects of hemorrhagic shock, aspirin, and ethanol on the biochemical and morphologic changes of experimental
pancreatitis
were evaluated.
Pancreatitis
was induced by infusing rats with a supramaximally stimulating dose (5 micrograms/kg/h) of caerulein. Hemorrhagic shock was established by removing sufficient blood to reduce mean arterial pressure by 30%, where it was maintained for 30 min.
Aspirin
(25 mg/kg) and ethanol (2 g/kg) were administered through an orogastric tube at 8-h intervals for 48 h. Hemorrhagic shock did not alter the degree of hyperamylasemia, pancreatic edema, cathepsin B subcellular redistribution, or in vitro LDH leakage that characterize this model of
pancreatitis
. Hemorrhagic shock did, however, worsen the morphologic evidence of pancreatic injury. Administration of aspirin with ethanol did not alter the degree of hyperamylasemia, pancreatic edema, or subcellular cathepsin B redistribution.
Aspirin
-ethanol pretreatment also did not alter the morphologic severity of
pancreatitis
. These observations indicate that hemorrhagic shock worsens the microscopic evidence of
pancreatitis
induced by supramaximal secretagogue stimulation. In contrast, aspirin-ethanol pretreatment, which might have been expected to increase pancreatic ductal permeability, did not alter the severity of this model of experimental
pancreatitis
.
...
PMID:Effects of hemorrhagic shock, aspirin, and ethanol on secretagogue-induced experimental pancreatitis. 169 83
A patient treated with sulfasalazine for new-onset ulcerative colitis developed self-limited
pancreatitis
. Rechallenge with 5-aminosalicylic acid (5-ASA) in enema form (Rowasa) again induced
pancreatitis
. Recent case reports suggest that the salicylate component of sulfasalazine can lead to the development of
pancreatitis
with oral 5-
ASA
administration. This patient's course demonstrates further that rechallenge with 5-
ASA
in a rectal form may also lead to
pancreatitis
.
...
PMID:Pancreatitis after rectal administration of 5-aminosalicylic acid. 196 72
A multi-institutional study to evaluate the efficacy, clinical application, and safety of extracorporeal shock-wave lithotripsy (ESWL) with the Dornier HM-3 or HM-4 lithotripter for bile duct calculi (BDC) was initiated in September, 1987. Symptomatic patients who entered into this prospective trial had BDC in the common bile duct and/or the intrahepatic, cystic or lobar ducts of the liver that were inaccessible or untreatable by papillotomy or percutaneous stone extraction. The study excluded gallbladder stones. Nasobiliary (54.4%) or transhepatic catheters (10.5%) and T-tube or cholecystostomy tubes (17.5%) or combinations (14.0%) permitted access for radiographic contrast to allow fluoroscopic monitoring of stone position and fragmentation. Exclusion criteria included pregnancy, failure to localize the stone, disturbances of coagulation, pacemakers, or vascular aneurysms or large bones that lie in the focal axis of the shock waves. Eleven institutions treated 42 patients (23 male, 19 female) with BDC; age range was 25 to 95 years (mean +/- SD, 73.5 +/- 13.8) and
ASA
risk category was 1 to 4 (mean, 2.3 +/- 0.8). Fourteen patients (33.3%) had a single BDC; 28 had 2 to 8 stones (mean, 2.7 +/- 1.8) ranging in size from 6 mm to 30 mm (mean, 18.5 +/- 6.4). The majority (66.7%) of patients were postcholecystectomy. The 42 patients received 57 ESWL treatments consisting of 600 to 2400 shocks per treatment (mean, 1924 +/- 289) at 12 to 22 kV (mean, 18.5 +/- 1.9) administered over 20 to 125 minutes (mean, 52.9 +/- 20.8). General anesthesia was used in 32% of the treatments; the majority were treated with epidural or regional block (42.1%), local infiltration (28.1%), or intravenous sedation (38.6%). Fifteen patients (35.7%) required two ESWL treatments. Stone fragmentation occurred in 94.6% of evaluable patients and in 90.4% of ESWL treatments, respectively; however, BDC fragments remained in 59.5% of patients 24 hours after treatment (diameter less than or to 3 mm, 12%; 4 to 9 mm, 16%; greater than or equal to 10 mm, 68%). Some patients (50%) required adjunctive procedures to achieve stone removal that included endoscopic extraction (n = 10; 47.6%), biliary lavage (n = 8; 38.1%), endoscopic bile duct prosthesis (n = 1; 4.8%), and operation (n = 2; 9.5%). ESWL treatment complications during hospitalization were observed in 15 patients (35.7%) and were present in four (9.5%) at discharge. Complications included macrohematuria (5%), biliary pain (15%), biliary sepsis (5%), hemobilia (10%), ileus (2.5%), and adverse pulmonary changes (7.5%). One patient developed
pancreatitis
before ESWL at ERCP that resolved prior to discharge.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Extracorporeal shock-wave lithotripsy of bile duct calculi. An interim report of the Dornier U.S. Bile Duct Lithotripsy Prospective Study. 265 83
Cephalic duodenopancreatectomy is certainly the operation of choice in cases of adenocarcinoma of the pancreatic head. We evaluated the results of this operation in order to justify its indication and to pinpoint the factors that have an influence on the patients' prognosis after the operation. From 1982 to 1992, 386 patients were hospitalized in our department with the diagnosis of pancreatic cancer, all histological types included. Of these, 21 men and 18 women, mean age 65 years, underwent cephalic duodenopancreatectomy for adenocarcinoma. Associated with these operations were 3 liver metastasis excisions, 2 vascular resections, 1 colectomy and 1 splenectomy. All the tumors were operated on whenever technically possible, except those associated with distant metastasis. Postoperatively, only one patient died (on the 29th day, of viral meningitis). Postoperative morbidity was 51% with 23% local complications. There was one leakage of the anastomosis. Age, weight loss, history of
pancreatitis
or cirrhosis, anesthetic risk (
ASA
) and tumor staging were not found to be factors increasing the risk of postoperative complications. Survival after 1 year was 34% and after 5 years 6%. The degree of histological differentiation was the only factor that had any significant influence on the postoperative survival rate in our study. We conclude that cephalic duodenopancreatectomy is the treatment of choice which is capable of improving the quality, and to a lesser extent the length, of survival of patients suffering from pancreatic cancer, with acceptable postoperative mortality and morbidity rates.
...
PMID:[Cephalic duodenopancreatectomy for pancreatic adenocarcinoma]. 774 Feb 89
A six-week placebo-controlled trial of the efficacy and safety of 6 g per day of 4-aminosalicylic acid (4-ASA) was conducted in 30 subjects with mild to moderately severe ulcerative colitis. Subjects were stratified into groups having distal (< 60 cm) or more extensive (> 60 cm) disease. Diarrhea, bleeding, sigmoidoscopic and biopsy appearance, and physician global assessment were scored to judge efficacy. Safety was evaluated by monitoring untoward symptoms and laboratory values. Median percent improvement was significantly greater (P < 0.05) in the 4-
ASA
> 60-cm group (42.7%) than in the placebo > 60-cm group (21.2%), but 4-
ASA
was not better than placebo for the < 60-cm group or the total study group. Severe dyspepsia (one subject), abnormal AST (transient in five, persistent in one) and elevated lipase without
pancreatitis
(six subjects) were noted. Thus 6 g 4-
ASA
for six weeks was more effective than placebo in mild to moderate ulcerative colitis extending more than 60 cm above the anus, but not in distal disease, and the drug was generally well tolerated.
...
PMID:Controlled trial of 4-ASA in ulcerative colitis. 905 19
Surgery remains the ideal emergency treatment for biliary lithiasis in elderly subjects despite perioperative morbidity and mortality. Minimally invasive techniques appear promising but require assessment. The aim of this work was to determine the usefulness of these techniques and evaluate outcome in a series of 157 patients over 75 years of age who were hospitalized in an emergency setting of complicated biliary lithiasis from January 1990 to December 1996. There were 103 women and 54 men, mean age 82 years. The patients' general status was evaluated according to the
ASA
classification; 66% of the patients were
ASA
III, IV or V. Diagnoses at admission were acute cholecystitis (n = 71, 45%), angiocholitis (n = 50, 31%) subintrant hepatic colic (n = 17, 10.8%),
pancreatitis
(n = 10, 6%), isolated jaundice (n = 2), peritonitis (n = 2) and occlusion (n = 5). Within 24 hours of admission, 7 patients underwent emergency surgery, and the 150 others were given medical treatment. Among these 150 patients, cure was considered to have been achieved with medical treatment alone in 41 (subsequent surgery being required in only one 6 months later), semi-emergency was performed in 17, and a minimally invasive procedure was performed in the 92 others (echo-guided percutaneous cholecystostomy in 42, endoscopic sphincterotomy in 50) followed by a subsequent operation in 29. In the 103 patients (65.5%) in this series who did not undergo surgery, mortality was 3.8% and in the 54 patients (34.5%) who did, mortality was 15%, but this rate was only 6.9% when the open procedure followed a minimally invasive technique. Surgical treatment of complicated biliary disease remains the ideal therapy but indications should be carefully weighed in these elderly fragilized subjects. Under surgical observation, abstention from surgery or use of minimally invasive techniques can play an important role in the therapeutic strategy aimed at lowering perioperative mortality.
...
PMID:[Comments on emergency treatment of biliary lithiasis in patients over 75 years of age. Apropos of 157 cases]. 968 57
Therapy with oral 5-aminosalicylic acid (5-ASA) for ulcerative colitis has been reported to be effective and safe. We describe a case of biochemically proven mild acute pancreatitis occurring after 9 d of oral 5-
ASA
therapy for ulcerative colitis. A hypersensitivity mechanism seemed to be involved in the development of
pancreatitis
probably owing to erratic systemic absorption of the drug. We suggest clinical and biochemical monitoring for early diagnosis of
pancreatitis
in patients with ulcerative colitis receiving 5-
ASA
administration. This is the first report of acute pancreatitis developed by oral 5-
ASA
therapy for the treatment of ulcerative colitis in the literature of Japan.
...
PMID:Acute pancreatitis secondary to 5-aminosalicylic acid therapy in a patient with ulcerative colitis. 1045 23
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