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Query: UMLS:C0030305 (
pancreatitis
)
16,014
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A case of intraluminal duodenal diverticulum (IDD) in a young man with chronic abdominal pain is reported. Diagnosis was done by a
barium
meal. Surgical excision was performed. Associated ectopic pancreatic tissue was found at operation. IDD is of congenital origin and it coexists with other anatomical abnormalities in 40%. Complications include chronic abdominal pain, duodenal obstruction, gastrointestinal bleeding,
pancreatitis
. Endoscopic resection is feasible, but surgical resection is safest. Peroperative localization of the papilla of Vater is mandatory to avoid its injury during resection of the mucosal attaches of the IDD.
...
PMID:Intraluminal duodenal diverticulum associated with heterotopic pancreatic tissue: case report and literature review. 314 54
Sixteen patients were treated for gastrocolic fistula arising as a complication of peptic ulcer (11 cases), colonic perforation (2), gastric cancer (1), colonic cancer (1) or
pancreatitis
(1). The predominant symptoms were diarrhoea, weight loss and abdominal pain.
Barium
meal and
barium
enema were the most reliable means of diagnosis, and no fistula was gastroscopically demonstrable. A one-stage en bloc resection of the involved gastrocolic region was performed in eight cases. Other operations were simple excision (3), gastric resection with closure of the colonic wall (2) and colectomy with closure of the gastric wall (2). In one case cure was achieved with cimetidine, without surgical intervention. Four patients died postoperatively and two had recurrence of fistula.
...
PMID:Gastrocolic fistulas. 337 89
Eighty-seven patients with neoplasm (57 cases),
pancreatitis
(28 cases), or benign biliary obstruction (2 cases) were treated with pyloric preserving pancreatectomy with two postoperative deaths, neither due to abdominal complications. About 50% of patients had delay in recovery of gastrointestinal function. Six and seven patients had clinically significant biliary and pancreatic fistulas, respectively, with some patients having both. Complications required 16 reoperations. Marginal ulcer was suggested by endoscopy or
barium
study in five patients, three of whom were successfully managed by a medical regimen. In the other two patients, exploration failed to demonstrate an ulcer or jejunitis. In most patients, long-term gastrointestinal function was judged to be excellent based on weight gain and lack of digestive symptoms. Pyloric function and gastric motility were evaluated by abdominal scanning using indium 111 and technetium 99m. Gastric emptying of liquids and solids was normal. Estimations of enterogastric reflux showed a moderate difference between normal subjects and pancreatectomy patients. Cancer-free survival was comparable to that after the standard Whipple procedure.
...
PMID:Pyloric and gastric preserving pancreatic resection. Experience with 87 patients. 376 76
Seven cases of gastrointestinal bleeding originating from peripancreatic blood vessels seen between 1977 and 1982 are presented. The bleeding originated either from true aneurysms, formed when the pancreatic inflammatory processes weaken the walls of peripancreatic blood vessels, from pseudoaneurysms which occurred after vascular leakage into pancreatic pseudocyst, or from veins. Gastrointestinal bleeding occurs when these entities rupture into gastrointestinal viscera. Hemorrhage of this nature must be considered in the clinical setting of patients who have a history of alcoholism, chronic relapsing
pancreatitis
, and known pseudocysts. Endoscopy, bleeding scans, and
barium
contrast studies are only occasionally helpful in diagnosis. Selective visceral angiography during acute hemorrhage is often diagnostic and concomitant arterial embolization techniques may offer a temporizing or permanent modality for hemostasis. This technique may be especially useful in the unstable, acutely ill patient with alcoholic hepatitis, sepsis, or an immature pseudocyst who poses a poor operative risk.
...
PMID:Major gastrointestinal hemorrhage from peripancreatic blood vessels in pancreatitis. Treatment by embolotherapy. 660 4
A patient with Crohn's disease which involved the duodenum presented with recurrent
pancreatitis
. His upper gastrointestinal series demonstrated spontaneous reflux of
barium
into the pancreatic duct. The literature is reviewed and a probable mechanism for this very unusual occurrence is suggested.
...
PMID:Crohn's disease of the duodenum with spontaneous reflux into the pancreatic duct. 664 47
A new inherited neuromuscular disease was identified in 4 patients (1 male, 3 females), offspring of consanguineous marriages, belonging to the same kindred. The proband was a 24-year-old female with history of ptosis and ophthalmoplegia since childhood and progressive intestinal pseudo-obstruction for the last 4 years of her life. A sural nerve biopsy showed axonal and demyelinating neuropathy. Muscle biopsies of pectoral and gastrocnemius revealed myopathic alterations with marked variation in muscle fiber size, atrophy of both fiber types and normal mitochondria. An upper gastrointestinal study showed
barium
in the stomach after 8 h and jejunal diverticula. Tests for absorption of fat, protein, carbohydrate, folic acid and vitamin B12 were normal. Serum levels of vitamin A and lipoproteins were also normal. The patient underwent partial gastrectomy and gastrojejunostomy. Postoperatively, she developed severe
pancreatitis
, sepsis, peritonitis and expired. Tissue samples from the proband and from her brother, revealed normal mucosa, but degeneration of smooth muscle of the stomach and small intestine. The myenteric plexus and vagus nerves were normal. The biochemical studies of contractile proteins (myosin, actin, tropomyosin) in the fresh and cultured smooth muscle cells of the proband obtained at the time of gastrectomy showed a 50-75% decrease in the synthesis of different contractile proteins. Turnover of contractile proteins and synthesis and turnover of collagen showed normal values. The reduction in synthesis of contractile proteins may account for the weak peristalsis and be a factor in the pathogenesis of the intestinal pseudo-obstruction.
...
PMID:Inherited ophthalmoplegia with intestinal pseudo-obstruction. 668 98
Although obstructive jaundice in pancreatic inflammatory disease is being recognized with increased frequency, duodenal obstruction is thought to be unusual. The occurrence of both duodenal and biliary obstruction suggests pancreatic cancer, and has seldom been described in
pancreatitis
. We report three patients with combined duodenal and biliary obstruction occurring as a complication of chronic pancreatitis. Distinction from carcinoma by
barium
study or laboratory results alone was not possible; instead, it depended on studies of the common bile duct, exploratory laparotomy in two patients, and follow-up in all three.
...
PMID:Duodenal and common bile duct obstruction in pancreatitis simulating carcinoma. 727 92
The "sump syndrome" is recognized as a complication of a choledochoenterostomy (choledochoduodenostomy or choledochojejunostomy) performed for recurrent stone disease. A sump (a pit or well) develops in the distal, nonfunctioning limb of the common bile duct where lithogenic bile, gastrointestinal contents, and debris accumulate. This results in obstruction of the enterostomy stoma producing either cholangitis,
pancreatitis
pain, and/or cholestasis. It is thought that dysfunction of the sphincter mechanism contributes to the development of this syndrome. Filling defects in the bile duct are appreciated on gastrointestinal series when
barium
reflexes into the biliary tree through the patent stoma. Treatment has largely been surgical, but, more recently, the availability of ERCP has enabled the endoscopist to make a major contribution to the management of this syndrome. A nonsurgical alternative to treatment is duodenoscopic sphincterotomy which has been performed in 11 patients presenting with the sump syndrome. There have been no recurrences of stones in 10 patients while stones were found in one patient with an open sphincterotomy. In follow-ups of 3-30 months, there was satisfactory relief of symptoms in all patients. Because of these results, duodenoscopic sphincterotomy is recommended as a primary treatment modality in the sump syndrome.
...
PMID:Duodenoscopic sphincterotomy in the treatment of the "sump syndrome". 728 33
Fifteen large bowel lesions are reported among 12 patients with acute necrotizing
pancreatitis
: 6 stenosis (transient in one case), 5 necrosis and 4 perforation. In 7 cases out of 12, abdominal plain film was suggestive of colonic involvement.
Barium
enema and coloscopy may confirm the diagnosis. Previously reported cases (56 stenosis, 84 perforations, 35 necrosis) are reviewed and clinical course radiographic features and the results of surgical management are discussed.
...
PMID:[Acute necrotizing pancreatitis. Large bowel complications (author's transl)]. 733 45
A mass associated with the gastrointestinal tract was detected by sonography in 33 patients. Etiologies included primary or metastatic tumor; intussusception; inflammation secondary to bowel infarction,
pancreatitis
, or irradiation; and a dilated, fluid-filled gut related to retained gastric contents, obstruction, ileus, or an ileal bypass. Mesenteric or omental changes were identified with inflammation and frequently with metastatic disease. The diagnosis was confirmed by repeat sonography, abdominal radiography,
barium
examination of the small bowel, computed tomography, surgery, or autopsy. Ultrasound patterns are characteristic in tumor, intussusception, and inflammation; specific features allowing differentiation between tumor and inflammation are described. Colonic haustra, valvulae conniventes, or bowel contours and peristalsis on real-time sonography are helpful in identifying fluid-filled bowel loops.
...
PMID:Ultrasound patterns of disorders affecting the gastrointestinal tract. 736 Sep 50
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