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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.
Gut 1992 Sep
PMID:Acute pancreatitis complicating Crohn's disease: mere coincidence or causality? 138 73

During the period from 1975 to 1991, 41 patients with 60 visceral artery aneurysms were treated at the Affiliated Hospitals of Emory University. The total included 13 patients in whom 16 aneurysms were treated primarily by transarterial embolization. There were seven hepatic artery aneurysms, three splenic artery aneurysms, three gastroduodenal artery aneurysms, two left gastric artery aneurysms, and one right gastroepiploic artery aneurysm. Average age of these patients was 50 years; there were eight males and five females. Seven patients presented with gastrointestinal bleeding, and two patients presented with abdominal pain. In four patients, the aneurysm was an incidental finding. Etiology of the true or false aneurysms consisted of pancreatitis in two patients, trauma in three patients, connective tissue disease in one, and was unknown in the remainder. Embolization was performed in seven cases with Gianturco coils and Gelfoam, with coils alone in four, with Gelfoam alone in four, and with detachable balloons in one instance. Complete occlusion was achieved initially in 13 cases. Recanalization occurred in two patients over a mean follow-up period of 8.6 months, requiring re-embolization in one patient, whereas the other patient was managed expectantly. In three cases, embolization was unsuccessful: two cases required surgical correction, and one case was managed expectantly. Only one complication was related to the embolization procedure, which was a common hepatic arterial dissection that proceeded to the formation of a false aneurysm. Embolization as the primary treatment modality for visceral artery aneurysms should be considered in patients with the following diagnoses: pseudoaneurysms associated with pancreatitis, intrahepatic aneurysms, most splenic artery aneurysms, and gastric, gastroduodenal, and gastroepiploic aneurysms. The procedure has a low risk and may obviate a difficult surgical procedure, but it does not preclude surgical intervention should the need arise.
Am J Surg 1992 Sep
PMID:Nonoperative management of visceral aneurysms and pseudoaneurysms. 141 17

Plasma values of immunoreactive interleukin-6, C-reactive protein and phospholipase A have been determined in serial samples from 24 patients with acute pancreatitis ('mild' pancreatitis nine, 'severe' pancreatitis 15). Median plasma concentrations of interleukin-6, C-reactive protein, and phospholipase A activity were significantly higher in patients with 'severe' illness (p < 0.001) than those with 'mild' illness. A particularly marked increase in interleukin-6 was found in two patients with necrotising pancreatitis and fatal outcome. Significant correlations between plasma concentrations of interleukin-6 and phospholipase A (p = 0.0218) and C-reactive protein and phospholipase A activity (p < 0.0001) were found in patients with 'severe' disease. These findings in a limited number of patients with acute pancreatitis are promising in that raised interleukin-6 correlated with clinical severity and with two other established markers, C-reactive protein, and phospholipase A activity.
Gut 1992 Sep
PMID:Role of interleukin-6 in acute pancreatitis. Comparison with C-reactive protein and phospholipase A. 142 82

Infections accompanying severe pancreatitis are secondary and of three types: infected pancreatic necrosis, infected pseudocyst (including peripancreatic fluid collection), and pancreatic abscess. The first is an earlier, more morbid process, with antibiotics supportive and surgical debridement necessary. The latter two processes occur later in the course of pancreatitis and are less morbid. Antibiotics are supportive and invasive-nonsurgical drainage methods are possible. The decision for intervention is based first on clinical toxicity as determined by an overall assessment by the clinician. The presence of parenchymal necrosis is best determined by the dynamic bolus CT scan. The presence of infection is best determined by percutaneous CT-guided aspiration. Infected necrosis is fatal unless treated with operative intervention. A peripancreatic fluid collection, pseudocyst, or pancreatic abscess needs to be treated if symptomatic. If infected, as determined by CT-guided needle aspiration, then they should be drained. Radiologic or endoscopic invasive-nonsurgical methods are tried initially and then surgery is attempted if they fail. The nonsurgical methods are most successful with pancreatitis of a nonbiliary or a nonalcohol etiology.
Infect Dis Clin North Am 1992 Sep
PMID:Infections complicating severe pancreatitis. 143 Oct 40

Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP) is a major opportunistic infection in acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) and is treated with co-trimoxazole, pentamidine and others. The severe adverse reactions, including bone marrow suppression, by these therapeutic agents often preclude their continued use. A 14-year-old male HIV-positive hemophilia A patient, who was complicated by disseminated intravascular coagulation syndrome (DIC) following acute pancreatitis during treatment for PCP, was treated with proteinase inhibitors and anticoagulant agents. He was improved and discharged. As pentamidine may cause pancreatitis and develop DIC, it is important that pancreatic enzymes should be carefully followed when this agent administrated. In this case, granulocyte colony-stimulating factor and erythropoietin were effective for the bone marrow suppression, suggesting that importance of these agents for the prophylaxis of other secondary infections during the treatment.
Rinsho Ketsueki 1992 Sep
PMID:[HIV-1 seropositive hemophilia A complicated by disseminated intravascular coagulation syndrome and acute pancreatitis during treatment of Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia]. 143 51

An uncommon case of gastric neurofibroma is described: it was an incidental finding during assessment for abdominal pain, possibly due to pancreatitis, in a 58 year old man, with no sign of von Recklinghausen's disease. The generic diagnosis of gastric wall neoplasia was made by CT scanning; the neoplasm was resected with wedge resection of gastric wall. Histological and ultrastructural examination revealed a neurofibroma. Gastrointestinal stromal tumors are rare occurrence and usually are of smooth muscle derivation: a small percentage arises from nerve sheet, but such a distinction is never sharp. Neurogenic gastric tumors are usually benign and only 10% of von Recklinghausen associated neurofibromas can undergo malignant transformation. Wide excision of the tumor appears therefore the treatment of choice.
Minerva Chir 1992 Sep 30
PMID:[Isolated neurofibroma of the stomach. Case report and review of the literature]. 146 26

Records of 940 patients with endoscopic sphincterotomy (ES) and 100 patients with choledochotomy for stone removal were compared. Those with ES were characterized by older mean age (65.9 vs. 60.6, p < 0.001), similar frequency of operative risks (36% vs. 45%), and a less complication rate (8.2% vs. 53%, p < 0.001) as compared with the surgery group. Complications of ES included cholangitis, pancreatitis, bleeding, and basket impaction. One patient each with cholangitis and pancreatitis died, thus a mortality rate of 0.2%. Complications of choledochotomy occurred in 53 patients with no death. Most of them were associated with anesthesia, laparotomy, wound and immobilization. The complications of ES should decrease due to recent development of lithotripsy instruments and endoscopic stenting to prevent cholangitis. Follow-up of 74 patients 15-21 years after surgical sphincterotomy revealed recurrent stones in 3.5%, which was lower than a recurrence rate of 10.3% in 290 patients 5-14 years after ES. However, that rate may be an underestimate, because the follow-up was obtained in only 79% of those with surgical sphincterotomy as compared with 99% of ES. Ninety percent of those with recurrence after ES underwent endoscopic treatments again, whereas 10% had surgery. Easy repetition at the time of recurrence is one of major advantages of the endoscopic treatment.
Nihon Geka Gakkai Zasshi 1992 Sep
PMID:[Clinical significance of endoscopic sphincterotomy compared with surgical common bile duct exploration and surgical sphincterotomy]. 147 Jan 24

Intrapancreatic activation of trypsinogens is believed to occur either as a cause or a consequence of acute pancreatitis and to be associated with the more severe forms of the disease. Trypsinogen-activation peptides (TAPs) were measured in plasma, urine, and ascites of rats (n = 54) assigned to different pancreatitis-inducing regimens reproducing the entire spectrum of severity. Compared with survivors, nonsurvivors at 9 hours had significantly higher TAP levels in plasma at 3 hours (P = 0.0001), urine (peak, 1-4 hours) (P = 0.004), and ascites (P = 0.0001) after death. Stepwise discriminant analysis showed that TAP in urine and plasma were the most accurate predictors of outcome (88.2% of animals) compared with other routine laboratory parameters. Morphometric analysis showed that the best histopathologic correlates of TAP elevation were acinar necrosis and intrapancreatic hemorrhage. In a second series of experiments using a homogeneous technique of induction producing pancreatitis with a mortality of 55% at 48 hours, plasma TAP level at 3 hours (cutoff, 0.5 nmol/L) and/or urinary TAP level (peak, 1-6 hours; cutoff, 25 nmol/L) accurately predicted outcome in 85% of animals. It is concluded that the TAP assay gives an accurate early prediction of outcome in different pancreatitis models and correlates best with acinar necrosis and hemorrhage.
Gastroenterology 1992 Sep
PMID:Trypsinogen-activation peptides in experimental rat pancreatitis: prognostic implications and histopathologic correlates. 149 2

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.
Dig Dis Sci 1992 Sep
PMID:Prooxidant properties of 5-aminosalicylic acid. Possible mechanism for its adverse side effects. 150 90

This study tested the hypothesis that hypovolemic shock elicits or promotes the development of infection during acute pancreatitis. Pancreatitis was induced in rats by ligation of the common biliopancreatic duct; nonlaparotomized animals served as controls. After 24 hr, the animals were subjected to either sham-shock (instrumented only) or to shock by withdrawal of blood through a femoral artery line by maintaining the mean arterial blood pressure at 30 mm Hg for 1 or 2 hr. After completion of the shock period, the shed blood was returned to the animal. All animals were sacrificed 24 hr later and specimens obtained from portal and systemic blood, liver, spleen, pancreas, and mesenteric lymph nodes for bacteriologic culture using standard techniques. The pancreas was also analyzed by morphometric techniques. The histologic changes of pancreatitis induced by biliopancreatic obstruction were characterized by marked edema with accompanying mild inflammation, hemorrhage, and necrosis. Concomitant with these morphologic findings was an associated translocation of enteric organisms to the mesenteric lymph nodes without spread to distant organs. Shock by itself induced only a mild edema in the pancreas and did not cause bacterial translocation. Furthermore, shock failed to aggravate the morphologic alterations of acute pancreatitis and did not promote bacterial spread to mesenteric nodes over that observed with pancreatitis alone. Thus, we conclude that periods of severe shock lasting up to 2 hr do not play a major role in the pathogenesis of infection in our model of pancreatitis.
Dig Dis Sci 1992 Sep
PMID:Influence of shock on development of infection during acute pancreatitis in the rat. 150 92


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