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

A 19-yr-old man ingested 25 g of acetaminophen in a suicide attempt. Twenty-one hours after the ingestion the plasma acetaminophen level was potentially hepatoxic at 62 micrograms/ml. The toxicology screen was negative for all other drugs. Thirty-six hours after admission the patient developed an acute abdomen with a serum amylase of 1500 IU. Peritoneal lavage revealed a grossly hemorrhagic fluid. Exploratory laparotomy revealed necrotic pancreatitis. Hepatoxicity with the peak SGOT greater than 2000 IU and a mild renal toxicity with the creatinine of 1.9 mg/dl occurred despite late initiation of treatment with n-acetylcysteine. No other etiology for the pancreatitis was found. Peritoneal irrigation was continuously performed through a surgically placed dialysis catheter. Pancreatitis associated with acetaminophen overdose has been reported twice in the past. Although the pathophysiology of the pancreatic injury is obscure, the lack of other etiological factors and temporal association of the pancreatitis with acetaminophen-induced hepatic and renal toxicity suggest a causal relationship.
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PMID:Hemorrhagic pancreatitis associated with acetaminophen overdose. 371 23

The serum and urine concentrations of a tumour-associated trypsin inhibitor, TATI, were determined by radioimmunoassay in patients with pancreatic cancer and with benign pancreatic and biliary diseases. Elevated serum levels (greater than 20 micrograms l-1) were found in 85% of the patients with pancreatic cancer, and elevated urine levels (greater than 50 micrograms g-1 creatinine) in 96% of the patients. Thus low TATI level, especially in urine, makes the possibility of pancreatic cancer less likely. Serial assay of TATI in serum from three patients with surgically removed pancreatic cancer showed elevation of the TATI level at the time of detection of recurrence. However, high serum and urine levels were also seen in pancreatitis and in benign extrahepatic cholestasis. Thus TATI is a sensitive, although not specific, indicator of pancreatic and biliary disease, but the use of TATI as a tumour marker in the primary diagnosis of pancreatic cancer is limited. Immunohistochemical staining of pancreatic lesions showed that half of the pancreatic tumours expressed TATI, but the pancreatic tissue adjacent to a carcinoma always stained stronger than the carcinoma. It therefore seems that the main source of TATI in serum and urine of patients with pancreatic cancer are the normal acini and not the tumour tissue. In pancreatitis the staining was intense and clearly stronger than in normal pancreas.
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PMID:Tumour-associated trypsin inhibitor, TATI, in patients with pancreatic cancer, pancreatitis and benign biliary diseases. 374 64

The characteristics of the blood curves of alpha-amylase (SA), pancreatic lipase (SL) and immunoreactive trypsin (SIT) have been analyzed in a series of patients daily explored throughout the evolution of pancreatitis attacks; urines were also collected to estimate the amylase-creatinine clearance ratio (ACCR). The following results were obtained. a). The 3 enzymes profiles ran roughly parallel during an acute attack. b). SL rose far higher than SA at the onset of the attack but its decay displayed a shorter half-life than the latter; these features resulted in an absence of systematic difference between their times of return to normal levels at the end of the attack. c). SIT more closely correlated with SL than with SA. d). In common hospital practice, simultaneous SA and SL determinations were proving a more reliable help to diagnose pancreatitis attack than ACCR.
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PMID:Evolution of serum amylase, lipase and immunoreactive trypsin during pancreatitis attacks. 387 8

The diagnosis of necrosis and its extent in acute necrotizing pancreatitis is one main problem in establishing criteria for possible pancreatectomy. With this in mind a clinicopathological analysis was carried out on 54 patients who had undergone pancreatic resection for acute necrotizing pancreatitis. The macroscopic appearance of the gland correlated poorly with its histology. Parenchymal necrosis varied from 0 to 100 per cent of the resected specimen though all the glands were considered totally or subtotally necrotic. In the clinicobiochemical status no criteria were found determining the extent of necrosis. Obesity, hypotension, hypocalcaemia and elevated serum creatinine in severely ill patients (as determined by Ranson criteria) strongly supported extensive peripancreatic and septal necrosis; however, 38 per cent of patients developed necrosis without those stigmata. While waiting for new methods to determine necrosis we prefer conservative treatment. In contrast to our previous tactics we think that resection should be limited to extreme cases in order to avoid resection of glands with limited necrosis and thus mainly reversible parenchymal damage.
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PMID:Determination of necrosis in necrotizing pancreatitis. 397 85

Continuous arterio-venous haemofiltration (CAVH), a simple technique not employing pumps, was used for treatment of acute renal failure in 25 intensive care patients (mean age 52 +/- 16 [SD] years). Acute renal failure was due to trauma in 9 patients, occurred after surgery in 7 patients and was related to septicaemia in 5 patients, peritonitis in 2 patients and pancreatitis in one patient; in one patient acute renal failure developed during pregnancy after preexisting renal disease. Seventeen patients were oliguric and 8 patients were non-oliguric, with a mean daily urine output of 507 +/- 407 ml. At the start of CAVH the serum creatinine level was 511 +/- 198 mumol/l. The duration of treatment with CAVH was 1 to 36 days (average 9.3 days). Access to the circulation was by cannulation of the femoral artery and vein in 23 patients and by Scribner shunt in 2 patients. After an initial systemic dose of 2000 IU heparin, a continuous infusion of 250-1000 IU/hr into the arterial blood line was administered, adjusted to a partial thrombin time of 58 +/- 28 sec. With this heparin regimen a single haemofilter could be used for an average time of 2.6 +/- 1.2 days. The mean spontaneous filtration rate was 6 +/- 2 ml/min, resulting in the following serum levels: creatinine 490 +/- 187 mumol/l; urea 39 +/- 12.5 mmol/l; potassium 4.5 +/- 0.5 mmol/l. Nine catheter-associated complications occurred in 5 patients. The most important aspect of CAVH was its simplicity, optimal control of fluid balance and the possibility of unlimited parenteral nutrition. Uremia was adequately and continuously controlled. Prognosis of ARF was related to the patients' underlying illness.
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PMID:[Continuous arteriovenous hemofiltration for the treatment of acute kidney failure]. 398 93

240 patients operated on for PHPT in the years 1956-79 were compared with 240 sex and age matched randomized controls to examine the present state of health of the patients. Diseases which occurred in both groups were registered to clarify their possible association with PHPT. Recurring urinary tract infections occurred as often in both groups, though renal stones had naturally been more frequent in the PHPT group. Serum creatinine was elevated in 33 PHPT patients and in 9 controls (p less than 0.001), and renal damage was also more severe in the PHPT patients. Malaise and fatigue occurred in 29 PHPT patients and in 14 controls (p less than 0.05). Medically treated hypertension was found in 95 PHPT patients and in 53 controls (p less than 0.001). Eight PHPT patients and one control had had pancreatitis (p less than 0.01). Peptic ulcer disease and gallstones were registered as frequently in both groups. 16 PHPT patients and three controls had received previous irradiation to the neck region (p less than 0.01). Six PHPT patients, but none of the controls, had had a differentiated non-medullary thyroid carcinoma. Two of the thyroid carcinoma patients had received irradiation. Other malignant diseases were as frequent in both groups. Three controls were hypercalcaemic and had PHPT verified at operation. The prevalence of PHPT in the control group was 1.25%. The state of health was normal in 52% of the PHPT patients and in 68% of the controls (p less than 0.001). The results indicate that PHPT permanently deteriorates the health of the patients and should therefore be diagnosed and treated as early as possible in the course of the disease.
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PMID:The state of health of patients previously operated on for primary hyperparathyroidism compared with randomized controls. 402 76

Two hundred and eighty-nine patients operated on for primary hyperparathyroidism (PHPT) in the years 1956-79 have been followed up for a mean period of 5 years. The aim of the study was to investigate the symptomatology of PHPT and the disappearance of the symptoms after operative treatment. Of the presenting symptoms hypercalcaemic crisis and cystic bone changes were cured, and none of the patients with pancreatitis as presenting symptom had a recurrence. In the renal stone group, 10% of the patients had recurring stones during the follow-up period. The presenting symptom disappeared in 84% of the patients. Thirty-five% of the patients had no presenting symptom and were classified as "asymptomatic", though, on questioning, most of them had various symptoms which disappeared postoperatively. Malaise, fatigue and muscular weakness disappeared in 79% of the patients, upper abdominal pains in 66%, constipation in 63%, pains in the extremities in 51% depression in 65%. Hypertension increased by 28% during the follow-up period; only three of the 90 patients with hypertension has discontinued antihypertensive treatment postoperatively. During the follow-up study, 6% of the patients were hypercalcaemic, though the serum calcium was only slightly elevated in almost all of these patients (mean +/- SD 2.75 +/- 0.09 mmol/l) and most of them had the multiglandular form of PHPT. The renal function did not deteriorate as much as was expected on the basis of earlier reports; only two patients had a serum creatinine over 500 mumol/l.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Long-term effect of surgical treatment on the symptoms of primary hyperparathyroidism. 407 2

The Cam/Ccr% has been suggested to be of value in the diagnosis of pancreatitis. The Cam/Ccr% was determined throughout gestation in normal pregnant and nonpregnant patients. The Cam/Ccr% was lower (p less than 0.05) throughout pregnancy and was a function of increased creatinine clearance. The Cam/Ccr% was increased in pregnant patients with pancreatitis. Two of four patients with the clinical diagnosis of hyperemesis gravidarum demonstrated elevations of the Cam/Ccr%. Toxemia with epigastric pain was noted to be associated with an elevated CamCcr% in all patients, whereas toxemia without epigastric pain was not routinely noted to be associated with an elevated ratio. The normal Cam/Ccr% in pregnancy is lower than the nonpregnant value, and this should be taken into consideration when evaluating a patient with suspected pancreatitis who is pregnant. Patients with the clinical diagnosis of hyperemesis gravidarum and toxemia should be screened with serial Cam/Ccr% for possible evolving pancreatitis.
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PMID:The amylase/creatinine clearance ratio in normal pregnancy and pregnancies complicated by pancreatitis, hyperemesis gravidarum, and toxemia. 615 8

Pancreatic ultrasonography and the determination of serum amylase and amylase creatinine clearance ration were performed on 17 normal children and on 35 children with abdominal pain. In all 17 normal subjects the echodensity of the pancreas was equal to or greater than that of the liver. Nineteen patients with abdominal pain had reduced echodensity of the pancreas when compared to that in normal children, and two of the 19 had pseudocysts. Serum amylase values and/or amylase creatinine clearance ratio correlated poorly with ultrasonic and clinical evidence of pancreatitis.
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PMID:The ultrasonic and biochemical diagnosis of pancreatitis in children. 615 12

The mean +/- S.E.M. ratio of amylase to creatinine clearance significantly increased at 24 hours after operations on the stomach and gallbladder but not after operations at sites remote from the abdominal cavity. Clinically, the elevated amylase to creatinine clearance ratio was not accompanied by pancreatitis. In dogs, surgical handling of the pancreas alone caused a significant increase in this measurement. The amylase to creatinine clearance ratio is not likely to be helpful in predicting the rare, but serious, postoperative complication of pancreatitis.
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PMID:Limitation of amylase creatinine clearance ratio as a diagnostic test for postoperative pancreatitis. 615 21


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