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Query: UMLS:C0030305 (pancreatitis)
16,014 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Because of its wide distribution in the organism, natural somatostatin (SRIF) demonstrates an ample spectrum of actions, involving mainly the central neuroendocrine system and the enteropancreatic area. In the former, this peptide may find its field of application in conditions characterized by excessive GH, TSH or ACTH secretion, depending on the central or peripheral cause of the inappropriate hormone control. The inhibitory effect of SRIF on gastrointestinal and pancreatic hormones may be useful in the management of tumors originating in this system and also in the treatment of inflammatory processes such as pancreatitis, in malignant diarrhea, and in gastrointestinal bleeding. A complex action of SRIF and its derivative on insulin release and glucose homeostasis may offer some advantages in the control of unstable diabetes. Dampening of organic functions in the upper digestive tract may also render SRIF and its analogues useful in the exploration of the gallbladder, gastric and pancreatic functions. The effect of such peptides on tissue growth and on the regulation of blood pressure are the subject of present investigations. Cytoprotection, an interesting aspect of SRIF application, is discussed elsewhere in this compendium. Finally, some comments on the possible use of SRIF as an additive to the conventional treatment of burns and sepsis close this review.
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PMID:Clinical applications of somatostatin. 290 Feb 4

To evaluate the prognosis and prognostic factors of chronic pancreatitis, 84 patients with alcoholic chronic pancreatitis and 51 with nonalcoholic chronic pancreatitis have been followed for 1-21 years (average of 7.1 years). The follow-up period was defined as the period from diagnosis to death in those who died and to the present in those still alive. The following conclusions were obtained. (1) Patients with alcoholic chronic pancreatitis showed a significantly higher mortality rate (26.2%) and cancer death rate (8.3%) than the age- and sex-matched population. In patients with nonalcoholic chronic pancreatitis, however, the difference did not reach the level of statistical significance, although both rates tended to be higher. (2) Patients with alcoholic chronic pancreatitis showed a significantly poorer prognosis than those with nonalcoholic chronic pancreatitis. (3) Frequent causes of death in chronic pancreatitis were cancer (11 cases) and diabetes-associated conditions (renal failure in three cases, intractable pneumonia in one, hypoglycemic shock in two, and myocardial infarction in two). Death directly from pancreatitis was observed in four. (4) Unfavorable prognostic factors in alcoholic chronic pancreatitis included heavy drinking, continuance of drinking after diagnosis, smoking, insulin-dependent diabetes, and an advanced age. In nonalcoholic chronic pancreatitis, however, patients' age was the only significant prognostic factor; smoking did not reach the level of statistical significance, although it tended to lead to a poorer prognosis.
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PMID:Prognosis and prognostic factors in chronic pancreatitis. 292 Jun 51

We report the case of a 22-year old woman who presented skin lesions of acanthosis nigricans, hirsutism and secondary amenorrhoea. She had high plasma levels of adrenal androgens and low plasma levels of sex steroid binding protein. Polycystic ovaries were discovered in the course of a laparotomy performed for paraovarian cyst. An oral glucose tolerance test revealed a state of hyperinsulinism with intolerance to carbohydrates, while the body mass index was normal. This insulin resistant state corresponded in vitro to a decrease in the number of erythrocyte insulin receptors without decrease in their affinity for insulin. Following paradoxical improvement during a full-term pregnancy, there was gradual deterioration of diabetes control requiring insulin therapy. This metabolic decompensation was accompanied by major hyperlipaemia followed by acute haemorrhagic pancreatitis. This case illustrates the course of a type A insulin resistance syndrome which was detected at an early stage in front of an hirsutism-acanthosis nigricans association. The underlying pathogenic mechanisms of these pathologies are discussed.
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PMID:[Acanthosis nigricans, hyperandrogenism, insulin resistance and mixed hyperlipemia]. 297 81

The tropical calcifying pancreatitis and/or fibrous pancreatitis are responsible for a number of cases of juvenile insulin-dependent diabetes in the Third World countries. World wide distributed in the tropical areas of Asia, Africa and South America, they can also be observed in Europe, in migrants from these countries. Intensive epidemiological and biochemical studies are currently developed in order to shed light on the many obscure points. Classification of the typical calcifying pancreatitis and the related syndromes is a matter of debate. The pathological basis is calcification of the pancreas and echography of the gland may become a cheap convenient relatively specific tool for epidemiology. The clinical syndrome consists of chronic painful pancreatic episodes since childhood, associated with pancreatic exocrine insufficiency, followed by the onset, during adolescence, of diabetes mellitus, which is most of the times insulin dependent. Patients' history is free of chronic alcoholism, but includes constantly chronic caloric and proteic malnutrition. Although insulin dependent this diabetes in not prone to ketosis, due presumably to carnitine deficiency and relative glucagon deficiency (or suppressibility). Insulin resistance is traditionally noted, the pathophysiology of which is unknown. The mechanism of calcification appearance is also undetermined. Either a deficiency in pancreatic stone protein, or the toxic effect of cyanogen glucosides present in cassava and other tropical foodstuffs, or the malnutrition-related deficiency in sulphur-containing aminoacids may be causal factors. No valid experimental model of the disease is available.
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PMID:[Diabetogenic tropical pancreatitis]. 304 66

We investigated the metabolic effects of omega-6 (safflower oil) and omega-3 (fish oil) fatty acid-enriched diets (65% carbohydrate, 20% fat) in two patients with a syndrome of diabetes mellitus, lipodystrophy, acanthosis nigricans, chylomicronemia, and abdominal pain. 3H-glycerol was used to evaluate triglyceride-rich lipoprotein-triglyceride (TRLP-TG) metabolism, and changes in glucose and insulin dynamics were also studied. On the omega-6 diet, both subjects demonstrated four- to five-times normal rates of TRLP-TG production and glycerol biosynthesis, and striking decrements in the fractional catabolic rate (FCR) for TRLP-TG and TRLP-particles. Both subjects had elevations in nonesterified fatty acid (NEFA) concentrations. In one patient, the omega-3 diet markedly decreased serum triglycerides and newly synthesized triglyceride glycerol production, in association with a fall in NEFA. In both subjects, plasma glycerol reutilization for triglyceride synthesis, normal on the omega-6 diet, was abolished on the omega-3 regimen. Plasma postheparin lipolytic activity was normal on both diets. On the omega-3 diet, xanthomas and hepatomegaly decreased and, in the patient who had no reduction in serum triglycerides, pancreatitis attacks virtually ceased. Mean 24-hour serum glucose levels were higher, and both basal and peak C-peptide responses to a carbohydrate meal were blunted on the omega-3 diet. One patient became ketonuric. We conclude the cause of hypertriglyceridemia in these patients was due to increased lipid synthesis and hypothesize that this is secondary to high plasma concentrations of NEFA. In addition, an omega-3 diet in these subjects inhibited insulin secretion and worsened glucose tolerance.
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PMID:Lipodystrophic diabetes mellitus. Investigations of lipoprotein metabolism and the effects of omega-3 fatty acid administration in two patients. 305 Mar 65

A total of 32 histologically documented cases of heterotopic pancreas was found in a review of the records of the department of pathology at the Chang Gung Memorial Hospital between 1977 and 1987. This review was done to ascertain the clinical significance of this uncommon entity. In 14 patients (44%), the aberrant pancreatic tissue was symptomatic; in the other 18 (56%), it was found incidentally. In the symptomatic group, the heterotopic pancreatic tissue was found in a duplication cyst of the ileum in one patient, in the common bile duct in one, in a Meckel's diverticulum in four, in the stomach in three, in a congenital duodenal diaphragm in one, in the duodenum in three, and in the ileum in one. The majority of heterotopic pancreatic tissue in the asymptomatic group was encountered in the jejunum (15 patients). Symptoms were related to complications, including obstruction of the common bile duct, mucosal ulcer with hemorrhage, intussusception, and intestinal obstruction, but not to pathologic conditions of the pancreas itself, such as pancreatitis or pancreatic cyst or neoplasm. In all of the clinically significant cases, the clinical symptoms disappeared completely after surgical removal of the aberrant tissue. In 28 cases (87%), diagnosis was made by frozen section during operation. Preoperative diagnosis of aberrant pancreas was not made in any of the cases. Histologically, all cases showed pancreatic excretory ducts; in 31 cases (97%), exocrine glands were present, and in 27 cases (84%), islets of Langerhans were discernible. There was no relationship between symptoms and the presence of islets, acini, or ducts. Mallory's phosphotungstic acid-hematoxylin stain was used to demonstrate zymogen granules in the acinar cells, and insulin, glucagon, and somatostatin were demonstrated with the horseradish peroxidase-antihorseradish peroxidase immunocytochemical staining technique; islets of Langerhans were also identified. Technetium Tc 99m scintigraphy was used to detect the bleeding source in a Meckel's diverticulum and an enteric duplication associated with ectopic gastric mucosa.
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PMID:Pancreatic heterotopia: a reappraisal and clinicopathologic analysis of 32 cases. 305 29

Mumps epidemics are followed by sporadic cases of insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM). We have studied beta-cell function in 11 subjects who had had a mumps infection. They had no clinical pancreatitis but were selected as they had abnormal pancreas iso-amylase values and/or glucosuria during the mumps virus infection. At the follow-up some years later the subjects were healthy. A few HbA1-values were noted in the upper part of the normal range. Total serum insulin values were normal, but the C-peptide values were low at first follow-up 1-3 years after infection in all but two patients. These values increased in 4/7 patients during the follow-up period but were subnormal in five subjects still 3-6 years after the infection. All five patients had HLA-DR 3 and/or 4. In 7 out of 11 patients islet cell surface antibodies could be demonstrated. Our results indicate that subclinical mumps pancreatitis may initiate a reaction towards the beta-cells recognized as subnormal C-peptide levels several years later in certain patients. This might contribute to manifest IDDM many years after infection.
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PMID:Mumps with laboratory signs of subclinical pancreatitis may cause a disturbed beta-cell function. 307 6

The treatment of acute pancreatitis is primary conservative independent of the degree of severeness. The aim of our multimodal concept of therapy (stomach tube, catheterisation of urinary bladder, closed peritoneal dialysis, analgetics--peridural catheter-, substitution of volume-electrolytes, colloides, protein, plasma, blood-, antibiotics, heparin H2-receptor blocker, early artificial respiration, insulin, parenteral nutrition-glucose, amino acids, fat-, hemofiltration/-dialysis, percutaneous drainage of liquid formations) is to postpone or to avoid an operation. Only the erosion bleeding or a locally conditioned sepsis ask for an emergency operation. The lethality of the degrees II (n = 30) and III (n = 39) could be decreased to 20.3% in the last 7 years. The follow-up of 55 patients with severe pancreatitis was free of clinical symptoms in 80% with normal exocrine and endocrine function of pancreas. This confirms that the organ itself is mostly intact even in severe cases of pancreatitis, in hemorrhagic-necrotic pancreatitis.
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PMID:[Pancreatitis: conservative therapy]. 310 Aug 87

Twenty-one patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus received simultaneous renal and segmental pancreatic transplants. A retrospective analysis of 112 real-time ultrasound (US) images, 108 technetium-99m glucoheptonate scinti-scans, 55 computed tomography (CT) scans, and 11 cystograms was performed. Complications that were observed included pancreatic transplant rejection, pancreatitis, arteriovenous occlusions, hemorrhage, abscesses, and extravasation at the pancreaticocystostomy site. Scintigraphy is a sensitive indicator of normal transplant function but is non-specific when findings are abnormal. Real-time US aids in the differentiation of acute rejection from pancreatitis and arteriovenous occlusion. CT is helpful for evaluation of postoperative complications. Imaging may play an important role in the noninvasive management of pancreatic transplants.
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PMID:Pancreatic transplantation: scintigraphy, US, and CT. 328 39

Twenty three patients with chronic calcific pancreatitis of the tropics in Northern India were prospectively studied. All had pancreatic calcification and ERCP changes typical of chronic pancreatitis, the most predominant being ductal dilatation which was detected in all patients by both ERCP and by ultrasonography. Pain was present in 19 (83%) patients and diabetes in 11 (48%) patients. Exocrine pancreatic dysfunction was uncommon, steatorrhoea being present in only 9% of patients. Ten of the 11 patients with diabetes required insulin for control and one case was able to be controlled by an oral antidiabetic agent. Two patients developed ketoacidosis during acute episodes of pancreatitis, 3 patients had peripheral neuropathy and one patient had visual changes. Recurrent severe pain was the reason for operation in 7 patients. All had a lateral pancreaticojejunostomy. In order to obtain an objective assessment of pain, a scoring system was developed to grade its severity according to its intensity, frequency and consequences. Six patients who preoperatively had a pain score of 15 or more (out of a maximum score of 24) attained significant relief after the surgery. We feel this scoring system may provide an easy objective assessment of pain in the subsequent follow-up of these patients.
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PMID:Chronic calcific pancreatitis: clinical profile in northern India. 329 40


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