Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0149521 (chronic pancreatitis)
7,199 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The physiology and pathophysiology of the sphincter of Oddi are poorly understood. The relationships of functional disorders of the sphincter to biliary and pancreatic disease and of organic lesions of the papilla to pancreatic inflammatory disease are subjudice to say the least. The efficacy of sphincter section in the treatment of chronic pancreatitis is unproved. Section of the sphincter may be necessary to treat biliary tract pathology but its use should not be routine or indiscriminative since, there is morbidity as well as mortality. Finally, the price of sphincterotomy is: 1. hemorrhage; 2. duodenal perforation; 3. pancreatic duct damage--a. acute pancreatitis; b. chronic pancreatitis; 4. sphincter incompetence--a. common duct regurgitation--cholangitis; b. pancreatic duct regurgitation--pancreatitis; 5. sphincter stenosis--obstructive jaundice; 6. stasis cholecystitis; 7. diarrhea; 8. morbidity 10%; 9. mortality 1.9%.
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PMID:The sphincter of Oddi, sphincterotomy and biliopancreatic disease. 39 44

To investigate the mechanisms initiating pancreatic enzyme activation followed by the development of a choledochal cyst and/or pancreatitis under anomalous choledocho-pancreatic ductal junction (ACPDJ), choledocho-pancreatic end-to-side ductal anastomosis was successfully performed in 40 puppies as an experimental model of ACPDJ. As a result, reflux of pancreatic juice into the common bile duct readily and continuously occurred, and all pancreatic enzymes in bile obtained from the common bile duct were activated. Total bile acids increased about 2 months after surgery, and the ratio of taurodeoxycholic acid to total bile acids increased within the first months after surgery. Various degrees of common bile duct dilatation developed in all puppies within 7 to 10 days after the surgery, and no further dilatation occurred in the subsequent period. Histological change in the pancreatic duct was less prominent than that in the common bile duct, but histologically proved chronic pancreatitis was found in three of 23 sacrificed dogs, in which there was strong evidence of free and massive regurgitation of the bile-pancreatic juice mixture between the bile and the pancreatic duct systems. These findings in this experimental study constitute the first step to prove that ACPDJ, which is often found in patients with choledochal cyst, is an important etiologic factor not only for choledochal cyst but also for pancreatitis, and bile acids play an important role in the mechanism of pancreatic enzyme activation under the condition of ACPDJ.
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PMID:Experimental study of the pathogenesis of choledochal cyst and pancreatitis, with special reference to the role of bile acids and pancreatic enzymes in the anomalous choledocho-pancreatico ductal junction. 656 75

Serum immunoreactive trypsin (IRT) response to secretin injection was studied in 13 patients with chronic pancreatitis with different degrees of exocrine dysfunction and in 10 control subjects. The maximal increase of serum IRT from basal values and the integrated trypsin output (ITO) after secretin administration were significantly correlated with the output of chymotrypsin into the duodenum during caerulein-secretin infusion (p < 0.01), but not with the output of lipase nor of bicarbonate. Serum IRT response to secretin stimulation was greater in 4 of the 5 patients with chronic pancreatitis with mild to moderate exocrine dysfunction than in the control group, suggesting an increased regurgitation of IRT into the blood stream by the pancreas, probably due to some degree of obstruction to pancreatic secretory flow in absence of severe acinar cell damage. Conversely, the response of serum IRT after secretin administration in 7 of the 8 patients with severe exocrine pancreatic deficiency was lower than in control subjects, probably because of the advanced distruction of the acinar pancreatic tissue. The response of serum IRT to secretin stimulation seems to vary following pancreatic function impairment and might reflect the degree of pancreatic exocrine dysfunction in chronic pancreatitis.
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PMID:Serum immunoreactive trypsin after secretin stimulation in chronic pancreatitis. 693 52

Serum immunoreactive trypsin (IRT) under basal conditions and after pancreatic stimulation with secretin was studied in 10 patients with type IV hyperlipoproteinemia (HLP) and in 10 control subjects. No significant difference was observed between basal values of the two groups (p = NS). The increase of serum IRT was already significant 5 minutes after secretin administration (p < 0.01) and persisted with significance for one hour in both groups. The integrated trypsin output (ITO) was significantly greater in type IV HLP than in controls (510.3 +/- 17.8 and 72.2 +/ 17.6 respectively, mean +/- SEM, p < 0.0125). Only 2 (20%) of 10 patients with HLP had an ITO in the range of the controls. No significant correlation was found between ITO and triglyceride levels (p = NS). The response of serum IRT to secretin in HLP patients appears comparable to that observed in alcoholics and in patients with chronic pancreatitis with mild to moderate exocrine dysfunction, in whom there may be an abnormal regurgitation of trypsin-like material into the blood stream after secretin stimulation, probably due to an obstruction to pancreatic secretory flow. A similar obstructive mechanism may be hypothesized also in patients with HLP, but no data concerning the exocrine pancreatic secretion and the histological features of the pancreas are available to confirm this hypothesis.
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PMID:Serum immunoreactive trypsin in type IV hyperlipoproteinemia. 693 55

The pathogenesis of chronic pancreatitis secondary to chronic alcoholism is not fully understood. A major hurdle in the understanding of the pathogenesis is the inability to study early lesions of the pancreas and the sequential changes. Facts are few; observations are many. Each new hypothesis argues against all previous hypotheses; however, clinical chronic pancreatitis is initiated by one or more of the mechanisms. Good experimental models for alcoholic pancreatitis are not available, limiting the ability to study the pathogenesis. Additional studies on genetic markers and immunologic mechanisms might explain acinar cell injury, which seems to be the earliest lesion in most, if not all, types of chronic pancreatitis. Opie's common channel and obstruction regurgitation theories seem unrelated to chronic pancreatitis. Although biochemical changes of the pancreatic secretion in alcoholic patients promote protein-plug formation, evidence is too weak to consider protein plug as the earliest change. The theory of necrosis of the acinar cell by some unknown mechanism, subsequently leading to fibrosis, is gaining support; however, it is clear that the pathogenesis of alcoholic pancreatitis is not yet fully understood.
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PMID:Pathogenesis of alcohol-induced chronic pancreatitis: facts, perceptions, and misperceptions. 1139 24

Enteral is preferred to parenteral nutritional support for acute and chronic diseases because it is more physiological and associated with fewer infection complications. Nasal tube feedings are generally used for 30 days or less and percutaneous access for the longer-term. Feeding by naso-gastric tubes is appropriate for most critically ill patients. However, trans-pyloric feeding is indicated for those with regurgitation and aspiration of gastric feeds. Deep naso-jejunal tube feeding is appropriate for patients with severe acute pancreatitis. There are several methods for endoscopic placement of naso-enteric tubes. Percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy is used for most persons requiring long-term support. Long-term jejunal feeding is most often used for persons with chronic aspiration of gastric feeds, chronic pancreatitis intolerant to eating, or persons in need of concomitant gastric decompression. Percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy with a jejunal tube extension is fraught with tube dysfunction and dislocation. Direct percutaneous endoscopic jejunostomy tubes may be more robust, but are less commonly performed.
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PMID:Endoscopic approaches to enteral nutritional support. 1678 32