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Query: UMLS:C0032285 (
pneumonia
)
54,520
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
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.
...
PMID:Prognosis and prognostic factors in chronic pancreatitis. 292 Jun 51
Living related donor (LRD) nephrectomies are controversial due to the risks to the donor and improved cadaveric graft survival using cyclosporine A. Between December 22, 1970, and December 31, 1984, 1096 renal transplants were performed at a single institution, 314 (28.6%) from LRD. The average age was 34.3 years (range: 18-67); none had preoperative hypertension. All nephrectomies were performed transabdominally. Major perioperative complications occurred in 22 (7.0%). These include wound infections (3.5%), pancreatitis (1.0%), injuries to spleen (1.0%) or adrenal gland (0.3%) requiring removal,
pneumonitis
(0.6%), ulnar nerve palsy (0.6%), femoral artery thrombosis after arteriogram (0.3%), pulmonary embolus (0.3%), and upper pole infarct of contralateral kidney (0.3%). There are six known deaths in this series, none of which were related to the operation. Major late complications were seen in 50 (20.0%) of 250 patients followed for 6 to 175 months (mean 53.1 months). These included definite hypertension (5.6%), suture granuloma (4.4%), incisional hernia (3.6%), proteinuria (2.4%), bowel obstruction (2.0%), nephrolithiasis (1.2%), wound infection (0.4%), scrotal hydrocele (0.4%), and
chronic pancreatitis
(0.4%). While the risk of hypertension appears to increase as the interval from donation increases, no cases of renal failure after donation have been noted, and negligible proteinuria among those followed long-term has been seen in this series. It is felt that living related kidney donation is justified when the relative is sincerely motivated and well informed prior to donation.
...
PMID:Living related kidney donors. A 14-year experience. 352 9
A 48-year-old man was admitted for the evaluation of a massive left pleural effusion. Thoracenthesis yielded a bloody excudate with a high percentage of eosinophils (27%) and high values of pancreatic enzymes (amylase 16,000 Somogyi, Elastase 35,000 ng/dl, Lipase 12,800 U/l, Trypsin 77,000 ng/ml). The amylase isozyme of the exudate was 100% pancreatic-type fraction. The blood showed no eosinophilia (4%). A computed tomographic scan and magnetic resonance image of the abdomen revealed a pancreatic pseudocyst in contact with the diaphragm, and thrombi in the inferior vena cava and the splenic vein. After pancreatic cystectomy and splenectomy, the pleural effusion resolved rapidly. Eosinophilic pleural effusion has been reported as a complication of several disorders:
pneumonia
, lung carcinoma, pulmonary tuberculosis, and pulmonary infarction. However, we know of no previous report of eosinophilic pleural effusion with pancreatitis. In this case, it is interesting that the massive eosinophilic pleural effusion associated with
chronic pancreatitis
resolved immediately after the operation, and the patient was discharged.
...
PMID:[A case of chronic pancreatitis with eosinophilic pleural effusion]. 766 23
A woman with a 20-year history of alcohol abuse and
chronic pancreatitis
developed an osteoarticular involvement of her right ankle in association with subcutaneous nodules. Histopathological examination of the tissue samples obtained during surgical revision of the ankle showed necrotic fat and connective tissue. Microbiological cultures remained negative. The patient was administered long-term antimicrobial treatment without any apparent benefit. Four months later, she died of pancreatic insufficiency and
pneumonia
. Postmortem examination showed numerous foci of intra-abdominal fat necrosis. Histopathological examination of the bone samples from the right ankle showed fat necrosis with lipophages. Based on these findings, we consider that the osteoarticular involvement in this patient was caused by intraosseous fat necrosis. This case reminds us of the importance of considering the possibility of this condition whenever a patient with chronic pancreatic disease develops sterile osteoarthritis.
...
PMID:Intraosseous fat necrosis simulating septic arthritis and osteomyelitis in a patient with chronic pancreatitis. 993 96
Chronic pancreatitis
remains a debilitating disease with few definitive options for treatment. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the benefit of pancreaticoduodenectomy in the treatment of
chronic pancreatitis
. The results were evaluated by standard descriptive statistics. In a retrospective study, we reviewed the patients at a single institution undergoing pancreaticoduodenectomy between 1994 and 1997 for complications of
chronic pancreatitis
. Patients were evaluated for preoperative indication for surgery and perioperative morbidity and mortality, as well as long-term results. Thirty-two patients underwent pancreaticoduodenectomy for
chronic pancreatitis
; 56 per cent (18) underwent pylorus-preserving and 44 per cent (14) underwent classic pancreaticoduodenectomy. The mean age of these patients was 56+/-14.7 years (range, 23-79). All patients underwent preoperative CT scan and endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography. The preoperative indication for surgery in 81 per cent (26) of these patients was intractable pain in the setting of a nondilated pancreatic duct. The other 19 per cent were treated for biliary/pancreatic duct stricture and pancreatic head fibrosis (mass suspicious of malignancy). Fifty-three per cent of the patients had a history of previous abdominal surgery. There were no perioperative deaths. The mean postoperative stay was 12.2+/-7.4 days. The postoperative morbidity rate was 31 per cent (10), consisting of 25 per cent with delayed gastric emptying, 3 per cent with
pneumonia
, and 3 per cent with wound infections. There was no occurrence of pancreatic fistulas. With a mean follow-up of 40 months (range, 10-52 months), 85 per cent reported a significant improvement in pain with 71 per cent being pain free and not requiring narcotics. Twenty per cent developed new-onset diabetes. The overall event survival rate at 5 years was 97 per cent. Thus, in a selected group of patients with severe
chronic pancreatitis
, resection of the head of the pancreas achieved relief of symptoms and was a safe and effective treatment for
chronic pancreatitis
.
...
PMID:The role of pancreaticoduodenectomy in the treatment of severe chronic pancreatitis. 1059 55
Detailed histopathological and immunohistochemical studies were carried out on 24 cetaceans, 17 of which were striped dolphins (Stenella coeruleoalba), four bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) and three Risso's dolphins (Grampus griseus), all found stranded on the Italian coast between 1990 and 1997. The most frequently detected lesions were chronic
pneumonia
(73.7% of the examined lungs), focal
chronic pancreatitis
(71.4%), non-purulent encephalitis (50%), chronic hepatitis (42.1%), and chronic focal interstitial nephritis (31.2%). The skin and the subcutaneous panniculus were often (33.3%) affected by parasitic diseases (Phyllobothrium delphini and Pennella sp.). An appreciable percentage of animals showed lymphoid depletion in their lymphatic organs (47.2%), as well as a high rate of parasitic infestations in their alimentary tracts (25%).
...
PMID:Histopathological and immunohistochemical studies on cetaceans found stranded on the coast of Italy between 1990 and 1997. 1084 62
Pleural effusion is a rare complication of
chronic pancreatitis
. We report a case observed in a 39-year-old patient hospitalized for dyspnea and pain in the lower left thorax. Chest x-ray revealed left pleural effusion. The exudative pleural fluid contained a very high amylase level. CT-scan revealed a pseudo-cyst of the tail of the pancreas extending into contact with the diaphragm and the
chronic pancreatitis
lesions. Medical treatment associating thoracic drainage, somatostatin analog, and antibiotics was unsuccessful. Thoracoscopic pleural decortication was performed. The patient then developed
pneumonia
involving the left base. A new antibiotic regimen was delivered and the pseudocyst was drained percutaneously under CT guidance. The clinical course was favorable at six months with partial involution of the pseudocyst and regression of the pulmonary images.
...
PMID:[A rare complication of chronic pancreatitis: pancreatico-pleural fistula]. 1469 97
This is the case of a 32-year-old male patient, diagnosed with end stage renal disease secondary to a focal and segmental glomerulonephritis. After four years of haemodialysis, he received a renal graft from a cadaveric donor. During the following sixteen years, he developped many different complications. In the early post-transplant period, he developed a severe acute tubular necrosis and two episodes of acute rejection took place, both of them with later recovery. Among the outstanding infectious complications were a virus herpes zoster dorsal infection and a Pseudomonas aeruginosa nosocomial
pneumonia
. Twelve months later, a series of severe digestive complications took place: cholecystitis that required cholecystectomy, pancreatic pseudocyst which required laparotomy because of an abdominal complication, two separate episodes of upper digestive bleeding that finally required gastric surgery, and an hemorrhagic subphrenic abscess that required a second laparotomy. Currently he has developed a calcified
chronic pancreatitis
. Moreover, metabolic complications must be mentioned carbohydrate intolerance, cataracts and an avascular bone necrosis, all of them closely related to the immunosuppressive therapy. In spite of these multiple complications, he mantains a good renal function and his quality of life is acceptable.
...
PMID:[Multiple complications after renal transplantation]. 1521 64
Authors present a rare case of upper digestive bleeding, the etiology of which is represented by a pancreatic papillary adenocarcinoma placed in the body and tail of the pancreas, with bleeding through the Oddi's sphincter, which causes difficult problems of medical and surgical diagnosis and treatment. The patient was known with acute cholecysto-pancreatitis of lithiasic cause, which has been surgically cured in 1977, being under treatment in the last years for the pancreatic injury which had been
chronic pancreatitis
and for hyperglycemia. The laboratory explorations emphasized a severe anaemia which was identified through upper digestive endoscopy (intermittent active bleeding from the major papilla) confirmed by echo and CT exam (heterogeneously body tissue of 10/8 cm diameter, involving the body and the tail of the pancreas). The medical treatment was complex, including proteic, hematologic, acido-basic, balance of hyperglycemia, and was followed by the surgical intervention consisting in body and tail pancreatico-splenectomy, followed by a postsurgical abscess, which required drainage. The surgical evolution was favorable. 6 months after leaving the hospital, the patient was admitted to medical diseases clinic with the diagnosis of deep right ileofemoral thrombophlebitis, duodenal acute ulcer and acute
pneumonia
of average right lobe, causing difficult problems of medical treatment. On this pathologic background, the diabetic failure also appears and the echo exam showing multiple secondary hepatic and peritoneal metastatic determinations. In medical literature we only met 13 similar communications, problems of diagnosis and treatment being very much alike to those presented.
...
PMID:[A rare cause of upper digestive tract bleeding--pancreatic papillary adenocarcinoma]. 1556 May 64
Severe tuberculosis (TB) requiring intensive care unit (ICU) care is rare but commonly known to be of markedly bad prognosis. The present study aimed to describe this condition and to determine the mortality rate and risk factors associated with mortality. Patients with confirmed TB admitted to ICU between 1990 and 2001 were retrospectively identified and enrolled. Clinical, radiological and bacteriological data at admission and during hospital stay were recorded. A multivariate analysis was performed to identify the predictive factors for mortality. A total of 58 TB patients (12 females, mean age 48 yrs) admitted to ICU were included. Mean Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation (APACHE) II score at admission was 13.1+/-5.6 and 22 of 58 (37.9%) patients required mechanical ventilation. The in-hospital mortality was 15 of 58 (25.9%); 13 (22.4%) patients died in the ICU. The mean survival of patients who died was 53.6 days (range 1-229), with 50% of the patients dying within the first 32 days. The factors independently associated with mortality were: acute renal failure, need for mechanical ventilation,
chronic pancreatitis
, sepsis, acute respiratory distress syndrome, and nosocomial
pneumonia
. These data indicate a high mortality of patients with tuberculosis requiring intensive care unit care and identifies new independently associated risk factors.
...
PMID:Characteristics and outcome of patients with active pulmonary tuberculosis requiring intensive care. 1648 85
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