987 resultados para Pancreatitis Diagnosis


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El diagnóstico oportuno en pancreatitis aguda es clave para abordar adecuadamente al paciente, para disminuir complicaciones. En la evaluación de la severidad de la pancreatitis, se cuenta con la escanografía; útil en la determinación de complicaciones locales; sin embargo, es necesario establecer su correlación con el curso clínico del paciente, evaluado mediante la escala APACHE II que cuenta con diversas variables. METODOLOGIA: Determinar la correlación entre las escalas clínica e imagenológica en la evaluación de severidad de la pancreatitis. Para esto, se revisan historias clínicas de la Fundación Cardio - Infantil de pacientes con pancreatitis aguda, se revisa si cumplen criterios de inclusión, y se emplea análisis estadístico descriptivo en SPSS, para establecer correlación entre las variables. RESULTADOS: Existe pobre correlación entre las variables, porque son escalas que evalúan parámetros diferentes, lo que hace que estas escalas se complementen. DISCUSION: Se analizaron 189 pacientes, de una población de 264; los restantes no cumplían criterios de inclusión. Las características demográficas y la etiología de la pancreatitis son muy similares a las descritas en otros estudios. Se tomaron paraclínicos para definir criterios de Ramson; y se les realizó escanografía abdominal para buscar complicaciones locales; de acuerdo a la escala BALTHAZAR-INDICE DE SEVERIDAD; y la evaluación clínica APACHE II, para hacer seguimiento clínico. El criterio de ingreso a UCI se evalúa con la escala APACHE II que puede hacerse periódicamente; posteriormente se evaluó coeficientes de correlación entre las variables con mayor impacto en pronóstico. PALABRAS CLAVES: Pancreatitis aguda, Severidad, Apache II, BALTHAZAR

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La pancreatitis aguda (PA) es una patología clínica común que abarca un espectro desde leve hasta fatal, donde se produce una inflamación del páncreas por auto digestión enzimática con grado variable de compromiso sistémico. Es una emergencia abdominal grave con una mortalidad del 9-23%. En el 40% de los casos de pancreatitis aguda se encuentra que es de origen biliar. La prevalencia de enfermedad biliar a nivel mundial en adultos varía entre 5,9% y 21,9%, con grandes variaciones geográficas y regionales, se encuentran en el 12% de los hombres y el 24% de las mujeres. La prevalencia aumenta con la edad. Latinoamérica es una región con alta prevalencia. En pacientes con colelitiasis del 5-15 % tienen coledocolitiasis. La alta prevalencia de la patología biliar en nuestro país hace que esta sea una causa frecuente de consulta médica por dolor abdominal. El factor común presente en la gran mayoría de las enfermedades de la vía biliar es la Colelitiasis. La complicación más frecuente, la Coledocolitiasis, se ha reportado con cifras hasta de un 20% y como complicación de esta la pancreatitis. La pancreatitis aguda de origen biliar (PAB) es causada por una obstrucción transitoria o persistente de la ampolla de Váter por barro biliar o por cálculos. En el diagnostico de la PAB se emplean métodos invasivos como la colangiopancreaticografia endoscópica retrograda (CPRE) la cual trae consigo morbilidad y mortalidad asociada y métodos no invasivos como la colangiopancreaticografia magnética (CRM) que emerge como modalidad prometedora en el diagnostico y manejo de la PAB en centros de tercer y cuarto nivel de complejidad. El manejo actual de la PAB es la remoción de la obstrucción del conducto biliar común (CBC) seguida de su tratamiento definitivo, la colecistectomía o CPRE con papilotomia. En nuestro país no se han publicado estudios con datos locales acerca de la utilidad de la CRM para la detección de coledocolitiasis, en las guías de manejo de coledocolitiasis de la asociación colombiana de cirugía publicadas en el año 2004, hace referencia de la utilidad de la CRM para el diagnostico de esta entidad tomando como base una revisión sistemática de estudios publicados en Medline, Pubmed y Cocrane los cuales no incluyen experiencia a nivel nacional. En este estudio pretendimos determinar cuáles son los pacientes que se benefician de la realización de CRM temprana en el marco de la PAB leve para la detección de coledocolitiasis.

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INTRODUCCION: La obstrucción biliar es la principal causa de pancreatitis aguda y su curso es moderado a leve aunque un 20% desarrollan formas severas. La remoción de los cálculos por CPRE se ha empleado como terapéutica aunque su rol es controversial y no se ha demostrado su utilidad en forma temprana. El propósito de este estudio es observar la evolución de los pacientes con PASB en quienes se realice CPRE con respecto al curso de la enfermedad. METODOLOGIA: Estudio retrospectivo observacional descriptivo en pacientes con PASB llevados a CPRE. Entre junio y octubre de 2012 se encontraron 72 pacientes con PASB y patrón biliar obstructivo, 49 (68.06%) en los cuales se realizo de forma temprana (antes de 72 horas) y 23 (31,94 %) de forma tardía (después de las 72 horas). RESULTADOS: No se encontraron diferencias en la morbilidad entre los dos grupos observados. Se encontró una mayor incidencia de PASB en mujeres, no hubo complicaciones asociadas al procedimiento y no hubo mortalidad asociada en ninguno de los grupos. DISCUSION: El estudio no muestra que la realización de CPRE tardía influya de forma desfavorable en los pacientes con PASB. Se encontró mayor incidencia de PASB en mujeres y edad media de 61 años. Deben realizarse mas estudios como el presente con un mayor número de pacientes para demostrar que no hay aumento en la morbimortalidad en los pacientes que sean llevados a CPRE después de 72 horas de inicio de los síntomas y poder generar recomendaciones de manejo locales.

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Acute fatty liver of pregnancy is a rare disease that affects women in the third trimester of pregnancy. Although infrequent, the disease can cause maternal mortality. The diagnosis is not always clear until the pregnancy is terminated, and significant complications, such as acute pancreatitis, can occur. Pancreatic involvement typically only occurs in severe cases after the development of hepatic and renal impairment. To date, little knowledge is available regarding how the disease causes pancreatitis. Treatment involves supportive measures and pregnancy interruption. In this report, we describe a case of a previously healthy 26-year-old woman at a gestational age of 27 wk and 6 d who was admitted with severe abdominal pain and vomiting. This case illustrates the clinical and laboratory overlap between acute fatty liver of pregnancy and pancreatitis, highlighting the difficulties in differentiating each disease. Furthermore, the hypothesis for this overlapping is presented, and the therapeutic options are discussed.

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Acute pancreatitis (AP) is a potential life-threatening disease, which originates from inflammatory involvement of the pancreas and surrounding tissues. Serious complications eventuate and treatment is difficult. AP is classified in both interstitial edematous pancreatitis, which occurs in 70-80% of patients, and necrotizing pancreatitis, which occurs in 20-30% of patients. Diagnosis is based on the presence of two of the following criteria: abdominal pain, increased serum determination of amylase and/or lipase more than three times the reference value, and characteristic tomographic findings. Among the latter, there is the pancreatic and surrounding tissue damage as well as that related to distant organ involvement. This case report shows the fatal case of a male patient with a history of heavy alcoholic abuse admitted with the diagnosis of necrotizing pancreatitis. The authors call attention to the unusual tomographic findings; namely, a huge duodenal hematoma and a large hemoperitoneum, ischemic involvement of the spleen and kidneys, as well as pancreatic and peripancreatic necrosis.

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BACKGROUND ; AIMS: Pancreatic and bile duct carcinomas represent highly aggressive malignancies that evolve from secretin receptor-rich ductular cells. With premessenger RNA splicing abnormalities common in cancer, we evaluated whether an abnormal secretin receptor spliceoform were present, characterized it, and developed a serum assay for it. METHODS: Cancer cell lines and healthy and neoplastic tissue were studied by nested reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction and sequencing. A promising spliceoform was isolated and characterized, and monoclonal antibodies were raised to 2 distinct regions. A dual antibody enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay was developed and applied to blinded serum samples from 26 patients with pancreatic carcinoma, 10 patients with chronic pancreatitis, and 14 controls. RESULTS: Each of 9 pancreatic cancer specimens and no normal tissue expressed a secretin receptor variant with exons 3 and 4 deleted. This encoded a 111-residue peptide with its first 43 residues identical to wild-type receptor, but, subsequent to a shift in coding frame and early truncation, the next 68 residues were unique in the transcriptome/proteome. This nonfunctional soluble protein did not bind or signal in response to secretin and was secreted from transfected MiaPaCa-2 cells. Elevated serum levels of this variant were present in 69% of pancreatic cancer patients, 60% of chronic pancreatitis patients, and 1 of 14 controls. CONCLUSIONS: We identified a novel abnormal spliceoform of the secretin receptor in pancreatic and bile duct cancers and developed a dual antibody sandwich enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay to measure it in the circulation. Initial application of this assay in patients with pancreatic cancer and chronic pancreatitis was promising, but additional validation will be required to evaluate its clinical utility.

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BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: The thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura-hemolytic uremic syndromes (TTP-HUS) have diverse etiologies, clinical manifestations, and risk factors, but the events that may trigger acute episodes are often unclear. We describe the occurrence of TTP-HUS following pancreatitis and consider whether pancreatitis may be a triggering event for acute episodes of TTP-HUS. DESIGN AND METHODS: We report on three patients from the Oklahoma Registry and two patients from Northwestern University who had an acute episode of TTP-HUS following pancreatitis. A systematic review of published case reports was performed to identify additional patients who had TTP-HUS following pancreatitis. RESULTS. In each of our five patients there was an apparent etiology of alcoholism or common bile duct obstruction for the pancreatitis and no evidence of TTP-HUS when the pancreatitis was diagnosed. Two patients had severe ADAMTS13 deficiency with an inhibitor; in one of these patients TTP-HUS recurred following a subsequent recurrent episode of pancreatitis. The systematic review identified 16 additional patients who had TTP-HUS following pancreatitis; recurrent TTP-HUS occurred in three of these patients following a subsequent episode of recurrent pancreatitis. In all 21 patients, the interval between the diagnosis of pancreatitis and TTP-HUS was short (1-13 days; median, 3 days). The three Oklahoma patients represent approximately 1% of the 356 patients in the Registry. INTERPRETATION AND CONCLUSIONS: These observations suggest that in some patients pancreatitis, a disorder that results in an intense systemic inflammatory response, may be a triggering event for acute episodes of TTP-HUS.

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The purpose of this study was to evaluate endosonography (EUS) as a potential diagnostic tool for feline pancreatitis. Eleven healthy cats and six cats diagnosed with pancreatitis based on an increased serum feline pancreatic lipase immunoreactivity (fPLI) concentration were included. Transabdominal ultrasound (AUS) and EUS were performed in all cats. The widths of both pancreatic limbs and echogenicity and homogenicity were assessed by AUS and EUS. Finally, findings from both modalities were subjectively compared. In the healthy cats, the right pancreatic limb was significantly smaller on EUS compared to AUS. Also, subjectively, general visualization of the normal pancreas was superior with EUS and, the pancreatic margins and parenchyma could be resolved better with EUS in all sick patients. In this study, EUS findings did not alter the diagnosis in six cats with pancreatitis when compared to AUS. However, EUS may be useful in cases where AUS fails due to obesity, hyperechoic mesentery, or excessive intestinal gas.

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Rationale: Life-threatening intraabdominal candidiasis (IAC) occurs in 30 to 40% of high-risk surgical intensive care unit (ICU) patients. Although early IAC diagnosis is crucial, blood cultures are negative, and the role of Candida score/colonization indexes is not established. Objectives: The aim of this prospective Fungal Infection Network of Switzerland (FUNGINOS) cohort study was to assess accuracy of 1,3-β-d-glucan (BG) antigenemia for diagnosis of IAC. Methods: Four hundred thirty-four consecutive adults with abdominal surgery or acute pancreatitis and ICU stay 72 hours or longer were screened: 89 (20.5%) at high risk for IAC were studied (68 recurrent gastrointestinal tract perforation, 21 acute necrotizing pancreatitis). Diagnostic accuracy of serum BG (Fungitell), Candida score, and colonization indexes was compared. Measurements and Main Results: Fifty-eight of 89 (65%) patients were colonized by Candida; 29 of 89 (33%) presented IAC (27 of 29 with negative blood cultures). Nine hundred twenty-one sera were analyzed (9/patient): median BG was 253 pg/ml (46–9,557) in IAC versus 99 pg/ml (8–440) in colonization (P < 0.01). Sensitivity and specificity of two consecutive BG measurements greater than or equal to 80 pg/ml were 65 and 78%, respectively. In recurrent gastrointestinal tract perforation it was 75 and 77% versus 90 and 38% (Candida score ≥ 3), 79 and 34% (colonization index ≥ 0.5), and 54 and 63% (corrected colonization index ≥ 0.4), respectively. BG positivity anticipated IAC diagnosis (5 d) and antifungal therapy (6 d). Severe sepsis/septic shock and death occurred in 10 of 11 (91%) and 4 of 11 (36%) patients with BG 400 pg/ml or more versus 5 of 18 (28%, P = 0.002) and 1 of 18 (6%, P = 0.05) with BG measurement less than 400 pg/ml. β-Glucan decreased in IAC responding to therapy and increased in nonresponse. Conclusions: BG antigenemia is superior to Candida score and colonization indexes and anticipates diagnosis of blood culture–negative IAC. This proof-of-concept observation in strictly selected high-risk surgical ICU patients deserves investigation of BG-driven preemptive therapy.

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BACKGROUND In past reports, researchers have seldom attached importance to achievements in transforming digital anatomy to radiological diagnosis. However, investigators have been able to illustrate communication relationships in the retroperitoneal space by drawing potential routes in computerized tomography (CT) images or a virtual anatomical atlas. We established a new imaging anatomy research method for comparisons of the communication relationships of the retroperitoneal space in combination with the Visible Human Project and CT images. Specifically, the anatomic pathways of peripancreatic fluid extension to the mediastinum that may potentially transform into fistulas were studied. METHODS We explored potential pathways to the mediastinum based on American and Chinese Visible Human Project datasets. These drainage pathways to the mediastinum were confirmed or corrected in CT images of 51 patients with recurrent acute pancreatitis in 2011. We also investigated whether additional routes to the mediastinum were displayed in CT images that were not in Visible Human Project images. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS All hypothesized routes to the mediastinum displayed in Visible Human Project images, except for routes from the retromesenteric plane to the bilateral retrorenal plane across the bilateral fascial trifurcation and further to the retrocrural space via the aortic hiatus, were confirmed in CT images. In addition, route 13 via the narrow space between the left costal and crural diaphragm into the retrocrural space was demonstrated for the first time in CT images. CONCLUSION This type of exploration model related to imaging anatomy may be used to support research on the communication relationships of abdominal spaces, mediastinal spaces, cervical fascial spaces and other areas of the body.

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Trabalho Final do Curso de Mestrado Integrado em Medicina, Faculdade de Medicina, Universidade de Lisboa, 2014

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Hereditary pancreatitis is an autosomal dominant condition characterized by recurrent episodes of acute pancreatitis, usually starting in childhood. We present a family who was ascertained when an 11-year-old girl presented with an episode of acute pancreatitis. Her father and other family members had also had recurrent bouts of acute pancreatitis. Genetic testing revealed a pathogenic mutation in the cationic trypsinogen gene in the proband, her father and her paternal grandmother. As far as we are aware, this is the first Aboriginal kindred with mutation-proven hereditary pancreatitis. Hereditary pancreatitis is an important differential diagnosis to consider in a patient with recurrent episodes of acute pancreatitis with no obvious precipitating cause. This family is of Aboriginal descent and the implications of the family's background are also discussed when considering the aetiology of the condition. We emphasize the need to ascertain a full family history from patients with a history of repeated episodes of acute pancreatitis and also emphasize the need to avoid ethnic stereotypes when assessing patients.