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Query: UMLS:C0149521 (chronic pancreatitis)
7,199 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Alcohol abuse ranks among the most common and severe environmental hazards to human health. Alcohol is a dependence producing drug and this dependence is associated with an increased risk of morbidity and mortality. While the social and behavioural consequences of alcoholism including psychiatric disorders are staggering, the manifestation of alcohol-related diseases is the most widespread somatic effect. In research conducted both at the social and individual level, alcohol was found to increase the risk of death from a number of specific causes, including injury from traffic accidents and other trauma, violence, suicide, liver cirrhosis, cancer of the liver, breast cancer, haemorrhagic stroke, alcoholic psychosis, alcohol dependence and chronic pancreatitis. The apparent beneficial effect of modest alcohol consumption (one to three drinks per day) on mortality and morbidity rates particularly relating to cardiovascular disease on the other side are of recent interest. Public health policy should aim at reducing the harm done by alcohol use, whilst recognizing its perceived and possible real benefits. The aim of this review is to introduce the reader to the definition of alcohol dependence and alcoholism, and summarize our knowledge about the effects of alcohol consumption on the gastrointestinal tract.
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PMID:Effect of ethanol and alcoholic beverages on the gastrointestinal tract in humans. 1236 39

Patients with chronic pancreatitis may suffer from maldigestion and malnutrition. Longstanding inflammation and fibrosis in the gland can destroy exocrine tissue, leading to inadequate delivery of digestive enzymes to the duodenum in the prandial and postprandial period and subsequent maldigestion. Maldigestion is augmented by inadequate bicarbonate delivery to the duodenum, with secondary inactivation of enzymes and bile acids by gastric acid. Abdominal pain, sitophobia, nausea, vomiting, postprandial satiety, and on-going alcohol abuse may contribute to poor oral intake. Gastric dysmotility and mechanical gastric outlet obstruction from fibrosis in the pancreatic head may contribute to malnutrition and clinical decline. Patients with chronic pancreatitis may at times experience profound steatorrhea and weight loss. In this article, we examine the natural history of exocrine insufficiency in chronic pancreatitis, outline the important nutritional issues in these patients, review the methods of diagnosis of maldigestion, and discuss the approach to therapy.
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PMID:Chronic pancreatitis and maldigestion. 1246 5

We present a case of invasive carcinoma of the pancreas derived from intraductal papillary adenocarcinoma without mucin hypersecretion in a 65-year-old man with a 45-year history of alcohol abuse and a 2-year follow-up of chronic pancreatitis. Two years previously, in May 1998, he was admitted for investigation of abdominal pain. Computed tomography (CT) showed diffuse dilation of the main pancreatic duct with atrophy of the pancreatic parenchyma. Endoscopic retrograde pancreatography (ERP) showed a diffusely dilated main pancreatic duct with irregular side branches in the head of the pancreas. Chronic alcoholic pancreatitis was diagnosed on the basis of the pancreatography findings. The patient was readmitted for investigation of progressive weight loss in August 2000. Serum CA19-9 levels were markedly elevated (750 U/ml) and CT showed enlargement of the head and body of the pancreas. ERP showed irregularity of the main pancreatic duct in the head of the pancreas, and the distal main pancreatic duct (which was dilated on initial ERP examination) was interrupted in the body of the pancreas. Suspected pancreatic carcinoma was diagnosed, and pylorus-preserving pancreatoduodenectomy was performed. Frozen section examination of the cut end of the pancreas revealed ductal carcinoma, and total pancreatoduodenectomy with portal vein resection was performed. Histologically, the resected tumor was diagnosed as an invasive carcinoma derived from intraductal papillary adenocarcinoma without mucin hypersecretion. We recommend observing changes in the pancreatic duct on pancreatography to diagnose invasive carcinoma of the pancreas derived from intraductal papillary adenocarcinoma in a resectable state.
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PMID:Invasive carcinoma of the pancreas derived from intraductal papillary adenocarcinoma without mucin hypersecretion but with changes in the pancreatic duct on pancreatography. 1254 Oct 53

High alcohol consumption in Europe makes it necessary to consider chronic pancreatitis when a patient with history of alcohol abuse presents with abdominal pain. Diagnosis should be made on the basis of imaging procedures and function tests. A scoring system for this, together with a short evaluation of the present diagnostic procedures, are presented.
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PMID:The problem of diagnosing chronic pancreatitis. 1277 64

Alcoholic pancreatitis is a major complication of alcohol abuse. Until recently, it was generally accepted that alcoholic pancreatitis was a chronic disease from the outset. However, evidence is now emerging in support of the 'necrosis-fibrosis' hypothesis that alcoholic pancreatitis begins as an acute process and that repeated episodes of acute injury lead to the changes of chronic pancreatitis (acinar atrophy and fibrosis) resulting in exocrine and endocrine dysfunction. The treatment of acute pancreatitis follows the regimen of bed rest, nasogastric suction, analgesia and intravenous support. The role of additional therapeutic measures such as prophylactic antibiotics, antioxidants and enteral nutrition in severe cases has not yet been precisely defined. The treatment of chronic pancreatitis involves attention to its three cardinal features: pain, maldigestion and diabetes. With respect to the pathogenesis of alcoholic pancreatitis, the focus of research over the past 30 years has shifted from the sphincter of Oddi and ductular abnormalities to the acinar cell itself. It has now been established that the acinar cell is capable of metabolizing alcohol and that direct toxic effects of alcohol and/or its metabolites on acinar cells may predispose the gland to injury in the presence of an appropriate trigger factor. A significant recent development relates to the characterization of pancreatic stellate cells, increasingly implicated in alcoholic pancreatic fibrosis. This chapter summarizes the natural history, clinical features, current trends in treatment as well as recent advances in our understanding of the pathogenesis of alcoholic pancreatitis.
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PMID:Alcohol-induced pancreatic injury. 1282 57

The pathophysiologic mechanisms that underlie acute and chronic pancreatitis arising from alcohol abuse are poorly understood. The reasons for this state of knowledge result historically from a lack of models for experimental investigation. Ethanol feeding alone, even at high doses, has minimal and inconsistent effects on morphologic findings in the pancreas in experimental animals. This experience, plus the fact that alcohol abuse causes pancreatic pathology in only a minority of patients, suggest that ethanol acts to sensitize the pancreas to the deleterious effects of other stimuli. In this article, we discuss findings to support this concept of ethanol as a sensitizing agent and experimental models developed that can be used to investigate the effects of ethanol on the pathologic processes of pancreatitis. These pathologic processes include inflammation, cell death, intrapancreatic digestive enzyme activation, and fibrosis.
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PMID:Emerging concepts for the mechanism of alcoholic pancreatitis from experimental models. 1289 53

The purpose of this report is to describe a case of tropical calcific pancreatitis (TCP). This disease is specific to tropical regions and constitutes the main cause of chronic pancreatitis in children worldwide. It can also be observed in young adults (2nd and 3rd decade). Shortage of dietary lipids during childhood has been implicated in the development of TCP and mutation of the SPINK1 gene has been cited as a predisposing genetic factor. The underlying pathophysiology of TCP is the same as chronic calcific pancreatitis (CCP) due to alcohol abuse. The main features are a sex ratio of 1, absence of alcohol consumption, occurrence of childhood diabetes in one third of cases, low incidence of acidoketosis, and presence of macro-calcifications especially in ducts. In 10% of cases TCP is complicated by pancreatic carcinoma occurring at an early age, located mainly in the body and tail of the pancreas, and having a less favorable prognosis than primary cancer. Treatment of patients with TCP is the same as for patients with CCP due to alcohol abuse. Prevention depends on improvement of nutritional status of the population.
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PMID:[Chronic tropical pancreatitis: a case report]. 1291 Jun 61

Susceptibility to alcoholic chronic pancreatitis (ACP) could be genetically determined. Mutations in cationic trypsinogen (PRSS1), cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR), and serine protease inhibitor, Kazal type 1 (SPINK1) genes have been variably associated with both the hereditary and the idiopathic form of chronic pancreatitis (CP). Our aim was to analyze the three genes in ACP patients. Mutational screening was performed in 45 unrelated ACP patients and 34 patients with alcoholic liver disease (ALD). No mutation of PRSS1 was found in ACP and ALD patients. Three mutations of CFTR were detected in four ACP patients with a prevalence (8.9%) not significantly different from that observed (3.0%) in ALD patients and from that expected (3.2%) in our geographical area. Neither compound heterozygotes for CFTR nor trans-heterozygotes for CFTR/SPINK1 were found. One ACP patient (2.2%) was found to carry the most common mutation (N34S) of SPINK1 compared to none of the ALD patients (P=NS). In five other patients (two with ACP and three with ALD) other rare variants, including P55S, were found. In contrast with the hereditary and the idiopathic forms of CP, in which mutations of PRSS1, CFTR, and SPINK1 genes may occur, ACP is still a "gene(s)-orphan" disease. The supposed genetic susceptibility to ACP relies on other yet unknown gene(s) which could affect the alcohol metabolism or modulate the pancreatic inflammatory response to alcohol abuse.
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PMID:Mutation analysis of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene, the cationic trypsinogen (PRSS1) gene, and the serine protease inhibitor, Kazal type 1 (SPINK1) gene in patients with alcoholic chronic pancreatitis. 1293 55

Long-term, heavy alcohol consumption is associated with both acute and chronic pancreatitis. Progression of pancreatitis may lead to multiple comorbidities including maldigestion, diabetes, and pancreatic cancer. Understanding the underlying molecular, biochemical, and cellular mechanisms by which alcohol ingestion leads to the development of pancreatitis may help to develop strategies for the treatment and prevention of the disease. The National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism and the Office of Rare Diseases of National Institutes of Health sponsored a satellite symposium on "Mechanisms of Alcoholic Pancreatitis" at the annual meeting of the American Pancreatic Association, Chicago, IL, November 2002. For this symposium, 8 speakers were invited to address the following issues: (1) epidemiology of alcoholic pancreatitis; (2) pathophysiology of alcoholic pancreatitis; (3) animal models of alcoholic pancreatitis--roles of cholecystokinin (CCK) and viral infections; (4) alcohol and zymogen activation in the pancreatic acinar cell; (5) role of alcohol metabolism in alcoholic pancreatitis; (6) pancreatic stellate cell activation in alcoholic pancreatitis; and (7) genetic predisposition to alcoholic chronic pancreatitis. It was concluded that alcohol abuse is a major contributory factor to the development of both acute and chronic pancreatitis. The injurious effects of ethanol on the pancreas may be mediated through (1) sensitization of acinar cells to CCK-induced premature activation of zymogens; (2) potentiation of the effect of CCK on the activation of transcription factors, nuclear factor kappaB (NF-kappaB) and activating protein-1 (AP-1); (3) generation of toxic metabolites such as acetaldehyde and fatty acid ethyl esters; (4) sensitization of the pancreas to the toxic effects of coxsackievirus B3; and (5) activation of pancreatic stellate cells by acetaldehyde and oxidative stress and subsequent increased production of collagen and other matrix proteins.
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PMID:Mechanisms of alcoholic pancreatitis. Proceedings of a conference. Chicago, Illinois, USA, November 2002. 1457 87

Chronic pancreatitis is most frequently associated with alcohol abuse. This should however not always automatically be accepted as the presumed cause. When the history is doubtful, uncommon etiologies must be considered as is illustrated by the present case. A 38 years old man was in the past 20 years treated for chronic pancreatitis ascribed to ethylisme although he always denied this. When the diagnosis was eventually questioned, new investigations showed slightly elevated sweat electrolyte concentrations and a delta F508/R117H genotype compatible with cystic fibrosis (CF). Demonstration of mild respiratory abnormalities, obstructive azoospermia and CF in his brother supported this diagnosis. Although rarely, pancreatitis typically develops in the kind of CF patients with milder genotypes and less severe symptoms. Systematic analysis for genetic mutations in patients with idiopathic chronic pancreatitis (ICP) revealed however that this mild form of CF is a less exceptional cause than thought. As CF patients increasingly survive into adulthood this disease should be considered as a possible etiology in the differential diagnosis of pancreatitis at all ages.
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PMID:Cystic fibrosis: an unusual cause of chronic pancreatitis. 1461 62


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