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Query: UMLS:C0030305 (
pancreatitis
)
16,014
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Twenty patients undergoing sphincteroplasty for cholelithiasis were randomly divided into two groups of 10. The former (T) were treated with a 4-h somatostatin intravenous drip (250 micrograms/h), started at the beginning of operation, while the latter (C) made up the control group. Serum and urine amylase, amylase
creatinine
clearance ratio, and liver function tests were assessed for 2 days before surgery, after the operation and for a period of 5 postoperative days. Homogeneity between the two series was verified in experimental conditions. Statistical differences occurred postoperatively in amylase
creatinine
clearance ratio, which proved higher in C group, and gamma-GT, which was higher in T group. Short-term somatostatin administration proved effective in reducing the postoperative amylase
creatinine
clearance ratio, although more evident results are reported after long-term administration. Cholestasis or any serious impairment in liver function did not occur, suggesting the suitability of somatostatin use even in patients with jaundice. Since a relationship between postoperative amylase levels and risk of
pancreatitis
has not yet been proved, the value of somatostatin in the prevention of postoperative
pancreatitis
after sphincteroplasty needs to be further verified.
...
PMID:Effect of perioperative somatostatin administration of sphincteroplasty-induced increase of amylase. 242 27
Acute alcoholic pancreatitis is a clinical diagnosis made in patients who have acute upper abdominal pain, emesis, and hyperamylasemia soon after ingesting alcohol. We sought to determine whether the clinical diagnosis of
pancreatitis
was supported by elevated serum levels of pancreatic isoamylase, currently the most specific test for
pancreatitis
. Serum lipase levels and urinary amylase/
creatinine
clearance ratios were examined for comparison with pancreatic isoamylase concentrations. Potential sources for salivary isoamylasemia were explored with technetium scans of the parotid glands. Of 19 patients with a clinical diagnosis of alcoholic pancreatitis, 16 had elevated levels of pancreatic isoamylase, and 17 had salivary hyperamylasemia. The diagnostic specificity of the serum lipase level or the urinary amylase/
creatinine
clearance ratio was excellent compared to that of the pancreatic isoamylase level. Three patients had elevated levels of salivary isoamylase only. Scans of the parotid glands in the study group revealed significantly higher uptake values than scans in nonalcoholic control subjects, suggesting one possible source of elevated levels of salivary isoamylase.
...
PMID:Alcoholic pancreatitis and parotitis: utility of lipase and urinary amylase clearance determinations. 242 37
Normothermic ischemia tolerance is an important aspect of organ procurement and transplantation. The function of pancreas and kidney autografts was investigated in totally pancreatectomized or nephrectomized canine recipients. In 30 dogs the left limb (tail) of the pancreas was removed but left in the abdominal cavity after cessation of blood flow to produce warm ischemia for 30, 60, and 120 min (10 dogs at each time point), and then was flushed with cold Ringers' lactate and transplanted to the iliac vessels. Twenty dogs with fresh pancreatic transplants were controls. The success rate of pancreas transplants with warm ischemia of 1/2 and 1 hr was the same as that of controls (80%); however, after 1 hr normothermia 5/10 dogs had episodes of hyperglycemia for 1 week before glucose levels came back to normal. All but one graft with 2 hr warm ischemia failed. Intravenous glucose tolerance test (IVGTT) mean (+/- SEM) K values were not different in the successful groups, i.e., no warm ischemia: -1.55 +/- 0.15%; 1/2 hr warm ischemia: -1.81 +/- 0.18%; 1 hr warm ischemia: -1.64 +/- 0.09%. Amylase levels increased after transplant with maximum values at Day 2, then returned to normal, but the levels remained elevated in recipients of grafts subjected to longer normothermia with evidence of
pancreatitis
after 1 hr warm ischemia. Fifteen kidney grafts were treated similarly with warm ischemia exposure of 1/2 hr (n = 9) and 1 hr (n = 6) before being flushed and autotransplanted, and were compared to 16 fresh kidney transplants. After 1/2 hr warm ischemia none of the kidney grafts failed but 78% of the recipients had elevated serum
creatinine
and urea nitrogen levels which returned slowly to normal after 3 to 4 weeks. There was only one long-term survivor after 1 hr warm ischemia. Thus the pancreas seems to be more resistant to warm ischemia damage than is the kidney. This difference should be taken into consideration in regard to organ procurement for clinical transplantation.
...
PMID:Definition of normothermic ischemia limits for kidney and pancreas grafts. 242 97
We sought to determine whether the clinical setting in which
pancreatitis
occurs affects the incidence and distribution of increased values of renal clearance of amylase relative to
creatinine
, CAm/CCr, and whether the increased values reflect a tubular disorder that impairs renal reclamation of certain low molecular weight proteins. We measured the renal clearance of three low molecular weight proteins (amylase, beta 2-microglobulin, and lysozyme) and urinary excretion of three lysosomal enzymes that originate from the renal tubule in three groups of patients (alcoholic pancreatitis,
pancreatitis
without alcoholism, and alcoholism without
pancreatitis
). When compared to normal controls, the mean CAm/CCr was significantly elevated in alcoholic pancreatitis (p less than 0.05) but not in equally severe
pancreatitis
without alcoholism nor in alcoholism without
pancreatitis
. The clearance ratio of beta 2-microglobulin was significantly increased in each of the three patient groups; mean clearance ratio of lysozyme was not significantly increased in any of the patient groups. Excretion of each of the three lysosomal enzymes was significantly increased in each of the patient groups. We conclude that the etiology of
pancreatitis
affects the distribution of values for CAm/CCr, impaired tubular reclamation of amylase is the mechanism of the increase in CAm/CCr, and a factor or factors associated with both
pancreatitis
and with alcoholism per se appear to disorder the renal tubule and to impair tubular reclamation of some but not all low molecular weight proteins-a novel finding of considerable potential significance.
...
PMID:Pancreatitis and alcoholism disorder the renal tubule and impair reclamation of some low molecular weight proteins. 243 Aug 54
The mechanism of the increased renal clearance of amylase and the amylase to
creatinine
clearance ratio (CAM/CCR) in acute pancreatitis remains controversial with both renal tubular dysfunction and altered glomerular permeability being invoked as explanations. To differentiate between these mechanisms, we investigated the quantity and character of protein excretion in 10 patients with
pancreatitis
. For a short period of time, seven of 10 patients had mild proteinuria with a mean protein excretion rate of 230 +/- 154 mg/24 hr. Proteinuria decreased in 9/9 survivors to 17 +/- 18 mg/24 hr. Albumin excretion rate initially was minimally increased in 10/10 patients with a mean of 61 +/- 40 mg/24 hr, decreasing during recovery in 8/9 survivors to 10.9 +/- 10.4 mg/24 hr (P less than 0.01). Electrophoresis of urine obtained during the acute phase consistently showed a low molecular weight proteinuria pattern that cleared with recovery. Twenty-one of 22 urinary samples with an elevated CAM/CCR had a low molecular weight protein pattern. All the above findings can be explained by alterations in renal tubular reabsorption of proteins without changes in glomerular permeability. In 2/4 patients a low molecular weight protein was present in urine specimens from the acute phase that was not present in highly concentrated urine specimens from the recovery period. This raises the possibility that an abnormal low molecular weight protein enters the serum in acute pancreatitis, which, after glomerular filtration, produces the renal tubular malfunction found in acute pancreatitis.
...
PMID:Urine protein excretion in acute pancreatitis. 243 Oct 86
Lipase, in contrast to amylase, is completely reabsorbed by the proximal tubules after glomerular filtration. Therefore, no lipase is detectable in the unconcentrated urine according to the current opinion. The handling of lipase (detected with an enzyme-immunoassay) by the kidney was investigated in comparison with
creatinine
, amylase, and beta-2-microglobulin by clearance studies in acute pancreatitis (n = 10), burn injury (n = 4), glomerular proteinuria (n = 8), and controls without evidence of pancreatic or renal diseases (n = 5). In initial stages of acute pancreatitis a measurable clearance of lipase (mean: 49.6 microliters/min, range: 0.5-234) was found in association with corresponding increased clearances of beta-2-microglobulin (mean: 10.5 ml/min, range: 0.02-58.9) and of amylase (mean: 8.9 ml/min, range: 2.4-22.6) in nine of ten patients. This finding is consistent with a defect of tubular function. However, regression analysis failed to show a significant correlation between lipase and beta-2-microglobulin clearance. Repeated measurements during the course of
pancreatitis
in seven patients showed reversibility of tubular dysfunction. In patients with burn injury a similar elevation of clearances of beta-2-microglobulin and of amylase was found, but tubular dysfunction in this condition was not associated with lipasuria. In glomerular proteinuria a lipase clearance was found in two of five cases with moderate, and in the other three cases with severe impairment of
creatinine
clearance. beta-2-microglobulin clearance was normal in the former and only slightly elevated in the latter group. In conclusion lipase is measurable in the urine of most patients with acute pancreatitis as a result of a reversible tubular dysfunction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Lipasuria in acute pancreatitis: result of tubular dysfunction? 244 47
The sensitivity and specificity of amylasemia, the ratios of amylase/
creatinine
clearance and amylasuria/creatininuria were determined in four groups of patients: a control group (n = 43), patients with acute pancreatitis detected on computed tomography (n = 30, 25 cases of alcoholic pancreatitis), patients with an acute surgical abdomen without
pancreatitis
(n = 25), and patients with renal failure (n = 20). Sensitivity was defined for the acute pancreatitis group and specificity for the other groups. When amylasemia was greater than 20 UI/dl and the amylasuria/creatininuria ratio greater than 100, sensitivity was 98 per cent. The specificity of these two results in patients with an acute surgical abdomen was 98 per cent. When the ratio amylase/
creatinine
clearance ratio was greater than 4 sensitivity was 73 per cent and specificity in patients with acute surgical abdomen was 75 per cent. These two values were lower than those of the two preceding tests (p less than 0.01). Sensitivity of the association of an amylasemia greater than 13 UI/dl (m + 2SD) with a clearance ratio greater than 4 was 73 per cent. The amylase/
creatinine
clearance ratio did not seem to be reliable since its change was delayed with respect to the increase of amylasemia and amylasuria. This ratio has a poor specificity as it increased when the clearance of
creatinine
decreased in the group with an acute surgical abdomen associated with functional or organic renal failure. In these two groups, the correlation between the amylase/
creatinine
clearance ratio and creatininemia was significant. This suggested that the clearance of
creatinine
fell more rapidly than the clearance of amylase as renal failure increased.
...
PMID:[Sensitivity and specificity of blood amylase, amylase and creatinine clearance ratio and urinary amylase/urinary creatinine ratio in the diagnosis of acute pancreatitis]. 245 61
Pancreatitis
and asymptomatic elevations of serum amylase have been reported after therapy with thiazide diuretics. In the current study, the effects of hydrochlorothiazide and tripamide treatment on serum and urinary amylase excretion were investigated in 12 hypertensive volunteers. Two patients developed modest elevations of the serum amylase above the normal range after 12 weeks of treatment with hydrochlorothiazide 50 mg daily, but the mean serum amylase did not change. Hydrochlorothiazide did not produce a statistically significant increase in urinary amylase excretion but did reduce the ratio of salivary amylase/
creatinine
clearance in a two-hour urine collection. Tripamide 10 mg daily had no effect on serum or urinary amylase.
...
PMID:The influence of hydrochlorothiazide and tripamide on serum and urinary amylase. 245 41
Serum amylase and lipase activities and
creatinine
concentration were determined before surgery, and at 1 and 2 days after exploratory laparotomy in 24 dogs. Examination of all viscera was done during each laparotomy, but a surgical procedure was not performed. The mean serum activities for lipase were: before surgery, 0.71 (0.0 to 2.0) Cherry Crandall units (CCU)/L; 1 day after surgery, 2.1 (0.0 to 4.5) CCU/L; and 2 days after surgery, 1.19 (0.0 to 3.9) CCU/L. The mean serum activities for amylase were: before surgery, 1,958 (1,027 to 3,426) IU/L; 1 day after surgery, 1,538 (937 to 2,659) IU/L; and 2 days after surgery, 1,663 (1,066 to 2,274) IU/L. Serum
creatinine
concentrations before surgery, 1 day after surgery, and 2 days after surgery were 0.88 (0.2 to 1.7) mg/dl, 0.78 (0.4 to 1.3) mg/dl, and 0.78 (0.3 to 1.3) mg/dl, respectively. Mean preoperative, day-1, and day-2 serum amylase activities and serum
creatinine
concentrations did not differ significantly from each other. Mean preoperative and day-2 serum lipase activities did not differ significantly; however, mean serum lipase activity was significantly greater when day 1 activities were compared with preoperative activities (P = 0.0002). Post-mortem examinations revealed no gross or histologic evidence of
pancreatitis
in any dog. The results of this study show that a 3 or more fold increase in serum lipase activity may occur after routine exploratory laparotomy in dogs without clinical signs or gross evidence of
pancreatitis
. Histologic evidence of
pancreatitis
was not found in the right pancreatic lobes in any dog.
...
PMID:Serum amylase and lipase activities after exploratory laparotomy in dogs. 247 52
Pancreas-specific protein (PASP) is a recently isolated and partially characterized major protein in the human pancreas. It has not been described previously. Serum levels of PASP and amylase were analyzed in 21 patients subjected to combined renal and segmental pancreatic transplantation with both organs obtained from the same donor and in eight kidney transplant patients. In the pancreas transplant patients, PASP and amylase levels were elevated in episodes of graft
pancreatitis
. With chronic graft rejection, PASP rose to high levels long before other indications. In episodes of renal rejection, the levels of PASP, but not always of amylase, were elevated on several occasions. They decreased after antirejection therapy. This may indicate accompanying pancreatic graft rejection. PASP and amylase levels were stable in kidney transplant patients and were not affected by serum
creatinine
levels, renal rejection, or antirejection therapy. The results support earlier observations that renal rejection in combined pancreas and renal transplant patients may or may not be accompanied by a rejection process in the pancreatic graft. PASP may be the means by which to tell when the pancreatic graft is involved.
...
PMID:A novel assay for pancreatic cellular damage: III. Use of a pancreas-specific protein as a marker of pancreatic graft dysfunction in humans. 265 29
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