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acute pancreatitis |
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acute pancreatitis Etymology: Gk, pan, all, kreas, flesh, itis, inflammation a sudden inflammation of the pancreas caused by autodigestion and marked by symptoms of acute abdomen and escape of pancreatic enzymes into the pancreatic tissues. The condition is associated with biliary disease or alcoholism. The autodigestion is caused by premature activation of the digestive enzymes. Acute pancreatitis can also be of unknown cause. See also pancreatitis. acute pancreatitis Inflammation of the pancreas of abrupt onset, often with gallstones and alcohol ingestion Epidemiology 109,000 hospitalizations, 2251 deaths–US; 10-fold ↑ from 1960s to 1980s–reason unclear;
? alcohol abuse; ? widened diagnostic criteria; ± 250 admissions/106 population/yr, higher in certain populations–eg, 4-22% in AIDS Pts Etiology Obstruction, toxins or drugs, trauma, metabolic defects, infection, vascular defects, idiopathic Diagnosis Abdominal pain, ↑ amylase, ↑ lipase, ultrasonography, contrast-enhanced CT Management Supportive, bowel rest with parenteral nutrition Prognosis Ranson's criteria, modified Glasgow criteria, APACHE II Prognosis 25% have complications, 9% die of pancreatitis, sepsis, pulmonary failure, etc. See Chronic pancreatitis. How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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| ? Mentioned in | ? References in periodicals archive | |
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Written by an Episcopal priest and survivor of acute pancreatitis,
Beginning Again: Benedictine Wisdom for Living with Illness is a guide
for making major changes in one's life to accomodate the
requirements of daily living with a serious or chronic condition. These findings were
consistent with diagnoses of diabetic ketoacidosis, acute renal failure
secondary to rhabdomyolysis, and possible acute pancreatitis. Chinese
alcoholic patients with esophageal cancer are genetically different from
alcoholics with acute pancreatitis and liver cirrhosis. |
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