Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0030305 (pancreatitis)
16,014 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Amylase isoenzymes, separated by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, were measures in 25 normal persons (mean amylase to creatinine clearance ratio 3.0%), 15 patients with acute pancreatitis (mean clearance ratio 9.5%, P less than 0.0001), and 6 patients with hyperamylasemia due to common duct stones (mean clearance ratio 4.1%). Two isoamylases (P1, P2) resembling pancreatic isoenzymes and three isoamylases (S1, S2, S3) resembling salivary isoenzymes appeared regularly in normal serum and urine. Salivary amylases predominated in serum, but pancreatic amylases predominated in urine. This finding is consistent with renal clearance of pancreatic amylases exceeding that of salivary amylases under normal conditions. In patients with pancreatitis or common duct stones, essentially all of the increased amylase activity in serum and urine was due to pancreatic isoamylases (P1 and P2) in their normal proportions. No new or altered amylase isoenzymes were detected. The fraction of pancreatic amylases in the serum or urine was identical for the two diseases. Whereas the difference in amylase to creatinine clearance ratios observed between the two groups of patients is not a function of different amylase isoenzymes presented to the kidney, we conclude that the increased amylase clearance in acute pancreatitis is caused by an alteration of renal transfer of amylase, either at the glomerulus or tubule.
Gastroenterology 1976 Sep
PMID:The mechanism of increased renal clearance of amylase in acute pancreatitis. 95 87

A 36-year-old woman was admitted to hospital with a first attack of acute intermittent porphyria. At the same time increased serum levels of amylase and lipase as well as an increased amylase clearance to creatinine clearance ratio were observed, permitting the diagnosis of acute pancreatitis. The etiology of the latter could not be determined. In addition, elevation of indirect bilirubin without evidence of hemolysis was observed Gilbert's syndrome was suspected. 40 weeks after the first episode, a second attack of identical abdominal pain was noted, with elevation of pancreatic enzymes in the serum. There is evidence that acute intermittent porphyria and acute relapsing pancreatitis may have some etiological connection in this patient.
Gastroenterology 1976 Sep
PMID:Acute intermittent porphyria with relapsing acute pancreatitis and unconjugated hyperbilirubinemia without overt hemolysis. 95 Jan

Amylase assays measure total activity without differentiating the relative contributions of pancreatic- and salivary-type amylase isozymes. Since polyacrylamide electrophoresis allows identification of salivary-and pancreatic-type isoxymes and their respective variants, serum and urine specimens from patients with the clinical diagnoses of mumps (4), pancreatitis (16), or undiagnosed hyperamylasemias (5) were compared with specimens from control subjects. Patients with mumps had elevations of salivary-type isozymes, while those with pancreatitis had elevations of pancreatic-type isozymes. Elevation of salivary-type isozymes was identified in the five patients who had undiagnosed hyperamylasemias; among these, the isozymes of two originated in neoplastic ovarian tissue and those of three, probably in the salivary glands. Amylase isozyme differentiation cannot unamibiguously identify the tissue source of hyperamylasemia. However, in patients whose hyperamylasemia is of unknown etiology or who respond atypically to therapy, amylase electrophoresis provides identification of the elevated isozyme type, thus providing the basis for the rational selection of further diagnostic procedures.
Am J Clin Pathol 1976 Sep
PMID:An evaluation of the usefulness of amylase isozyme differentiation in patients with hyperamylasemia. 96 37

In contrast with what has widely been assumed, disease of the gallbladder sometimes remains undertected by even repeated cholecystography or cholegraphy. Chronic cholecystitis, gallstones, and acalculous cholesterolosis can escape detection by roentgenography of the gallbladder. Of 4,000 patients subjected to cholecystectomy between 1962 and 1973, the cholecystogram had been normal in only two. The range of indications for the operation has since been widened. Patients with typical symptons of gallbladder disease or recurrent pancreatitis of unknown origin have been operated on despite a normal cholecystogram. Within as short a period as eight months, an additional six patients with a normal cholecstogram have been operated on at our hospitals. Treatment consisted of cholecystectomy also in the four patients in whom no stones could be palpated in the gallbladder. Gross and microscopic examination of the gallbladder in these patients revealed cholesterolosis. When last seen, seven of the eight patients were still symptom-free an average fifteen months after the operation.
Am J Surg 1976 Sep
PMID:Disease of the gallbladder in patients with normal cholecystograms. 96 7

Comparison of a group of patients with acute alcoholic pancreatitis with a group with gallstone pancreatitis has established the serum amylase level on admission as one of the most useful laboratory tests in aiding to differentiate the two entities. A serum amylase level greater than 1,500 IU was most often due to gallstone pancreatitis, as was elevation of the serum bilirubin and alkaline phosphatase levels.
Am J Surg 1976 Sep
PMID:Diagnostic considerations in acute alcoholic and gallstone pancreatitis. 96 8

Serial measurements of plasma "true glucagon" (PG) and of glucagon-like immunoreactive materials (GLI) were carried out during and after total resection of the pancreas in a 62-year-old man with calcified pancreatitis. The postoperative course of this patient was uneventful and diabetes was well controlled. PG disappeared from the blood within 30 min after resection of the pancreas. In spite of the evidence that no pancreatic tissue was present in the abdomen, PG was detected again in the blood from 18 hr after total pancreatectomy until the ninth postoperative day. However, plasma PG did not rise following infusion of arginine during the fourteenth postoperative week. After an initial decrease, plasma GLI rose abruptly on the second postoperative day and remained elevated thereafter. The fluctuations of plasma PG and GLI were not parallel.
Proc Soc Exp Biol Med 1976 Sep
PMID:Plasma glucagon after total resection of the pancreas in man. 96 83

A simple modification of an alpha-amylase (E.C. 3.2.1.1.) procedure, using blue starch substrate, permits quantitative results after three minutes of incubation. The procedure, performed on blank, control, and unknown speciemns, takes advantage of the heat stability of the enzyme and provides immediate and reliable data for acutely ill patients. The performance characteristics of the test on serum and urine are described. The method is distinctly advantageous in prividing rapid results for serum amylase, urine amylase, and amylase clearance in patients with suspected pancreatitis.
Am J Med Technol 1976 Sep
PMID:A rapid, manual test for amylase at 52C. 97 Apr 6

Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) was carried out in 98 patients with unexplained abdominal pain or known pancreatitis with recurrent pain. Patients with jaundice were excluded from the study. In 38 patients with a clinical diagnosis of pancreatitis, the radiological findings on ERCP were graded according to the criteria of Kasugai et al. Advanced pancreatitis was found in 20 patients (52,5%), moderate changes in 7 (18,4%) and minimal-change pancreatitis in 6 (15,8%). ERCP had normal pancreatic function tests. In 35 patients investigated for unexplained abdominal pain, changes consistent with pancreatitis were found in 7, pancreatic carcinoma in 5, a duodenal ulcer in 2, gallstones in 1 and a duodenal tumour in 1. ERCP was normal in 19 patients. A comparison of the findings on ERCP and the standard secretin-cholecystokinin pancreatic function test was available in 52 patients. There was a good agreement between the two tests in the patients with advanced or moderate pancreatitis as revealed by ERCP, but less agreement in the patients with minimal-change pancreatitis. A few patients with clinical pancreatitis and abnormal ERCP had normal pancreatic function tests. ERCP increases the diagnostic yield in patients suspected of having pancreatitis and is at present the only reliable method of diagnosing pancreatic carcinoma which is not evident by other non-operative techniques. ERCP is also of value in the assessment of the severity of pancreatitis and is a necessary investigation before pancreatic surgery to confirm or exclude cyst formation or the site of duct obstruction. The finding of an unsuspected cyst at ERCP necessitates early operation because of the danger of introducing infection during the procedure.
S Afr Med J 1976 Sep 11
PMID:Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography in the evaluation of pancreatic disease. 98 98

In 5 out of 35 patients with acute, acute relapsing and chronic pancreatitis, barium enema revealed partial colonic stenosis at the splenic flexure. In 3 patients laparotomy disclosed colonic perforation with abscess, adhesions between colon and pancreas or a marked pancreatic edema. In two patients barium enema follow-up 3-6 months later showed spontaneous resolution of the stenosis. Comparison with 35 cases in the literature shows that colonic stenosis after pancreatitis is usually incomplete, located at the splenic flexure and due to adhesions between the colon and the pancreas. Spasmodic pains in the upper abdomen, increasing constipation and often rectal bleeding or positive guaiac test of the stool may indicate colonic stenosis. Spontaneous resolution is possible, but if operation is indicated the adhesions should be carefully dissected in order to obviate resections of the colon or the pancreas.
Schweiz Med Wochenschr 1976 Sep 11
PMID:[Colonic stenosis after pancreatitis]. 100 43

Alloxan diabetes was induced in inbred rats that then were divided into four groups consisting of unoperated diabetic controls, sham-operated diabetic controls, rats given pancreaticoduodenal isografts, and rats given duct-ligated pancreas isografts. The animals were studied for from 18 months (controls) to two years (transplants) and the following important results were obtained: 1) In striking contrast to the diabetic controls, pancreas transplants of both types produced immediate and permanent relief of hyperglycemia, immediate and lasting elevation of serum insulin levels, a normal weight and growth curve, and good health for two years. Removal of the graft was followed by recurrence of severe diabetes. 2) Pancreas transplants of both types prevented the widespread and severe renal, ophthalmic and neural lesions of diabetes that were found in the diabetic controls. 3) The duct-ligated pancreas graft and pancreaticoduodenal transplant were equally effective in controlling diabetes. Ligation of the pancreatic duct was not followed by significant morphologic or clinical evidence of pancreatitis or by loss of endocrine function. 4) Portal venous drainage of the pancreas transplant was unnecessary for good endocrine function.
Ann Surg 1975 Sep
PMID:Long term studies of pancreas transplantation in experimental diabetes mellitus. 109 93


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>