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Query: UMLS:C0030305 (
pancreatitis
)
16,014
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In healthy volunteers (n = 10), the exocrine pancreatic secretion was studied after intragastric administration of a peptid solution which corresponded to the
nitrogen
component of a commercially available peptid diet, and of a solution of the analogous amino acids. Both test solutions were emptied out of the stomach in the same time interval and evoked a comparably high pancreatic secretion of volume, amylase, lipase, trypsin and chymotrypsin. These findings are discussed in regard to recommendations to apply elemental diets for treatment of complicated
pancreatitis
.
...
PMID:[Effect of the nitrogen components of a peptide diet and the analogous amino acids on pancreatic secretion in the human]. 618 97
The authors make a retrospective analysis of 95 cases of acute pancreatitis hospitalized between 1975 and 1979. In 3,8% of all the cases the acute pancreatitis was associated with hyperlipoproteinemia. The study of the 4 patients involved revealed the primary origin of hyperlipoproteinemia as a result of alimentary abuse in 3 of the cases. In a fourth case the increased serum lipoproteins were due to prolonged use of contraceptives. From the clinical viewpoint,
pancreatitis
associated with hyperlipoproteinemia was more severe, with signs of shock and collapse, respiratory failure, high serum
nitrogen
an hyperglycemia. The blood and the serum had a lactescent aspect, with a thick layer of chylomicrons. The serum and blood values for lipids were higher than 4000 mg%. The increase in the amount of lipids was especially due to high triglycerides values. From the anatomopathologic viewpoint the 4 patients presented as acute cases of cholecysto-
pancreatitis
with major and extensive haemorrhagic necrosis which involved almost the entire pancreas. The evolution of the four patients was difficult. Two of the patients recovered after a long hospitalization, and had definitive sequels - insulin-dependent diabetes. The other two patients died following septic complications (bronchopneumonia and visceral gangrene), and hypovolemia due to upper digestive haemorrhage.
...
PMID:[Hyperlipoproteinemia, a factor of severity in acute pancreatitis]. 646 Feb 73
The effect of high
nitrogen
Criticare and Vivonex on nutritional repletion was evaluated in 12 patients with malnutrition secondary to pancreatic insufficiency. The patients were randomized to receive either Criticare HN or Vivonex HN for a total period of 9 days. Each patient received 3000 kcal/day of either preparation, in addition to 1000 kcal of solid food. A significant weight gain was encountered in the group of patients receiving Criticare HN. Increased blood urea
nitrogen
was encountered in both groups of patients. All patients tolerated both diets well without evidence of relapse of their
pancreatitis
. No significant complications were encountered. Our results indicate that Criticare HN is of superior nutritional value, but both preparations resulted in increased blood urea
nitrogen
retention.
...
PMID:Comparative effects of Criticare HN and Vivonex HN in the treatment of malnutrition due to pancreatic insufficiency. 669 26
Previous reports regarding the effect of an elemental diet (ED) on pancreatic secretion have been conflicting. This study was designed to assess the effect of a high-
nitrogen
ED or total parenteral nutrition (TPN) on proteolytic activity in the pancreatic exocrine cell. Forty-eight dogs were divided into 12 groups of 4 each. Group I (control) was fed commercial dog food. Groups II, III, and IV received 1, 2, and 3 days, respectively, of 25% glucose with 4.25% amino acids. Groups V, VI, and VII received 1, 2, and 3 days, respectively, of 25% glucose with 2.75% amino acids. Groups VIII, IX, and X received 3 days of ED given orally, via gastrostomy or jejunostomy, respectively. Groups XI and XII received 1 day each of either 2.75% amino acids or 25% glucose. The pancreas of each dog was then resected and processed for electron microscopy, or minced and analyzed for tryptic activity expressed as micromoles of benzoyl arginine ethyl ester (BAEE) digested per milligram of pancreatic protein. There were no significant differences in ultrastructure or in the levels of pancreatic tryptic activity between the control and the 11 experimental groups. It appears that during the short period of our treatment with TPN as well as ED, the exocrine cell retains its normal content of proteolytic enzyme. Reports of others that pancreatic secretion volume decreases with TPN and ED, coupled with our findings of stable intracellular tryptic activity, indicate that the synthesis and release of proteolytic enzymes have actually been reduced by TPN and ED. Thus, TPN or ED should benefit the patient with
pancreatitis
by decreasing pancreatic secretion as well as pancreatic proteolytic enzyme synthesis.
...
PMID:The effect of total parenteral nutrition or elemental diet on pancreatic proteolytic activity and ultrastructure. 680 Dec 82
17 patients with acute necrotic
pancreatitis
were proved by CT or operation. These patients were randomly assigned to fat-glucose-based group (n = 9) and glucose-based group (n = 8). Their PN regimen consisted of nonprotein calories (NPC) 35-40KJ (146-167KJ)/kg/d and
nitrogen
0.19-0.29g/kg/d. NPC was supplied by either dextrose or dextrose and intralipid. The PN duration was 2 weeks. The following measurements were performed: triglyceride, chorestrol, HDL, LDL, Apo-A, Apo-B and free fatty acids. The results showed that there was no hypertriglyceridemia developed after fat emulsion was administered for two weeks. It confirmed that fat emulsion could be rapidly oxidigzed. In our group, the patients with hyperglycemia were 64% at the admission time, and hyperglycemia was difficult to control in early period (10 days). But hyperglycemia was easly to control when patients received fat emulsion. There was no harmful effect on liver function during 2 weeks of intralipid administration. The data showed no difference between the two groups on conventional measurements, lysosomal enzymes and blood gas analysis. Intralipid infusion did not make ANP deterioration. These results indicated long-term intravenous intralipid in patients with ANP was safe and useful.
...
PMID:[Effect of intralipid on patients with acute necrotic pancreatitis: a prospective clinical study]. 758 87
Pancreatic abscess remains a potentially lethal disease. Efforts to relate outcome to the severity of associated
pancreatitis
or the type of surgical drainage employed have yielded conflicting results. This study was designed to test the validity of traditional prognostic criteria in the clinical setting of pancreatic abscess and to determine whether the technique of surgical drainage employed correlated with survival. The records of 40 consecutive patients with pancreatic abscess were reviewed. In each case the diagnosis was confirmed by operation. Prognostic factors analyzed included number of Ranson criteria, etiology, type, and number of microorganisms isolated, extent of abscess, time to diagnosis and operation, and technique of surgical drainage. Of the 11 Ranson criteria evaluated, only an elevation in blood urea
nitrogen
> 5 mg/dl correlated with decreased survival (p < 0.001). Polymicrobial abscesses (three or more organisms) resulted in a higher mortality than abscesses where fewer than three organisms were isolated (45.4 vs 13.8%; p < 0.05). Intraperitoneal extension of the abscess was associated with an increased mortality rate compared to those confined to the retroperitoneum (57.1 vs 15.2%; p < 0.01). In patients requiring unplanned reexploration, mortality was significantly increased (42.9 vs 11.5%; p < 0.05). The technique of surgical drainage employed (open versus closed) did not influence overall mortality (23.5 vs 21.7%; p = NS). Extent of disease at operation, polymicrobial abscess, reexploration for persistent or recurrent disease, and deterioration in renal function were all predictive of increased mortality in cases of pancreatic abscess.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Are traditional prognostic criteria useful in pancreatic abscess? 779 88
The effects of growth hormone treatment and dietary alanine supplementation, individually and in combination, were studied in five patients with organic acidemias. Three patients had propionic acidemia, one had 3-hydroxyisobutyric acidemia, and one had a defect in isoleucine metabolism. Two patients with propionic acidemia had decreased growth hormone secretion in response to provocative stimuli (intravenous L-arginine and oral levodopa or clonidine); the remaining subjects had sufficient growth hormone secretion. Three of four subjects in whom IGF1 was measured showed subnormal concentrations at baseline (including two with normal growth hormone secretory responses). All patients showed an increase in linear growth with growth hormone. In the four patients studied, all had a significant increase in
nitrogen
retention over baseline with alanine or growth hormone alone, or with the combination of growth hormone and alanine, with a much greater effect of growth hormone. Lean body mass and body fat composition tended to become normal with treatment. Protein tolerance increased, and when the patients' dietary protein intakes were increased between 20 and 60% they maintained positive
nitrogen
balance, without a significant increase in metabolite excretion. One patient with propionic acidemia expired during the time of the study, following a course of recurrent
pancreatitis
and an episode of acute basal ganglia infarction. All of the other subjects showed clinical improvement (decreased incidence of ketoacidotic episodes and decreased frequency of hospital admission and school absence) during treatment, and even the patient who expired remained metabolically stable up to and through the terminal event. We conclude that growth hormone may be of value in the management of patients with organic acidemia.
...
PMID:Anabolic effect of human growth hormone: management of inherited disorders of catabolic pathways. 799 63
Some recent proposals in management of alcoholic liver disease are discussed focusing on early diagnosis and treatment of alcohol abuse itself, alcoholic hepatitis early mortality, clinical meaning of nutritional therapy, serological approach and treatment of hepatic fibrosis, and problems in liver transplantation for end stage alcoholic liver cirrhosis. CAGE or similar systematized brief questionnaires, and desialylated transferrin/total transferrin ratio as serological marker, seems to be interesting contributions to "hidden" alcohol abuse diagnosis and abstinence control while psycho-social support and voluntary incorporation to self-aid groups are the best weapons to reach persistent abstinence. Corticosteroids seems to improve survival in a selected group of patients with severe alcoholic hepatitis, specially in those presenting encephalopathy but free of GI bleeding, decompensated diabetes, active infections,
pancreatitis
, and other contraindications or adverse effects of these drugs. Relationship between direct toxicity and nutritional deficiencies in pathogenesis of alcoholic liver injury are not clear enough, but malnutrition is generally present in patients requiring hospitalization, and related to clinical severity; oral, enteral or parenteral nutritional supplementation in this order of preference according to patients condition, associated or not with steroid anabolics, are useful in cases with moderate to severe alcoholic hepatitis or decompensated cirrhosis to eliminate the catabolic state, reaching a better
nitrogen
balance and liver function tests, without special adverse effects. A special role on liver regeneration is discussed. Antioxidants and supernutrients are special "modern" aspects of nutritional therapy in alcoholic liver disease generally related to the MEOS activation in chronic alcoholism, the excessive production of free radicals, and the depletion of glutathione, membrane phospholipids (specially phosphatidycholine), and vitamin A, E, and C. Natural supplements as soybean polyunsaturated lecithin, with high concentration of phosphatidycholine, or oral supplementation with natural metabolic products depleted from the liver of chronic heavy drinkers, such SAMe, have an interesting rationale based on experimental and clinical findings besides availability and costs. Carotenoids and tocopherols supplementation seems to be an useful tool, but are limited in the case of vitamin A because its special toxicity in chronic alcoholism. Serological markers of metabolism of liver connective tissue are clearly involved in fibrogenesis process and other inflammatory connected events; standardization of laboratory methods surely will result in new possibilities of non-invasive valuation of liver injury, evolution and therapeutic response; special histological damage such as sinusoidal "cappilarization" (type i.v. collagen and laminin), endothelial sinusoidal cell function (seric hyaluronate), or collagenase activity (TIMP-1 or tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases-1) seems to be valuable by these new technologies.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:[New suggestions for the management of alcoholic liver diseases]. 852 63
The involvement of active oxygen has been suggested in the development of cerulein-induced acute pancreatitis in rats. Previously, we directly detected pancreatic active oxygen (O2-) production in rats with cerulein-induced
pancreatitis
by using a supersensitive photon counter and a cypridina luciferin analogue (MCLA) that reacts specifically with O2- by emitting luminescence. In the present study, with the specific aim of determining the source of O2-, we prepared two groups of animals with cerulein-induced
pancreatitis
: those treated with allopurinol, a xanthine oxidase inhibitor; and those treated with
nitrogen
mustard, a leukopenia-inducing substance. In each of these two groups, pancreatic O2- production and the severity of pancreatic injuries were comparatively studied. In the leukopenic animal group, decreases in O2- dependent chemiluminescence and improvement in the pancreatic condition coincided. This suggests that neutrophils might be involved in experimentally induced
pancreatitis
as a source of active oxygen.
...
PMID:The involvement and sources of active oxygen in experimentally induced acute pancreatitis. 872 Jun 65
The purpose was 1) to prospectively determine the prevalence of adverse events necessitating intensive care unit (ICU) monitoring in gallstone
pancreatitis
(GP) and 2) To identify admission prognostic indicators that predict the need for ICU unit monitoring. Prospective laboratory data, physiologic parameters, and APACHE II scores were gathered on 102 patients with GP over 14 months. Adverse events were defined as cardiac, respiratory, or renal failure, gastrointestinal bleeding, stroke, sepsis, and necrotizing
pancreatitis
. Patients were divided into Group 1 (no adverse events, n=95) and Group 2 (adverse events, n=7). There were no deaths and 7 (7%) adverse events, including necrotizing
pancreatitis
(3), cholangitis (2), and cardiac (2). APACHE 11 > or = 5 (P < 0.005), blood urea
nitrogen
(BUN) > or = 12 mmol/L (P < 0.005), white blood cell count (WBC) > or = 14.5 x 10(9)/L, (P < 0.001), heart rate > or = 100 bpm (P < 0.001), and glucose > or = 150 mg/dL (P < 0.005) were each independent predictors of adverse events. The sensitivity and specificity of these criteria for predicting severe complications requiring ICU care varied from 71 to 86 per cent and 78 to 87 per cent, respectively. The prevalence of adverse events necessitating ICU care in GP patients is low. Glucose, BUN, WBC, heart rate, and APACHE II scores are independent predictors of adverse events necessitating ICU care. Single criteria predicting the need for ICU care on admission are readily available on admission.
...
PMID:Admission factors can predict the need for ICU monitoring in gallstone pancreatitis. 881 62
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