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Acute pancreatitis By: Elias S.
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Acute pancreatitis An acute inflammatory process of the Pancreas Associated with sever abdominal pain and elevated pancreatic enzymes Incidence US – 79.8/100,000/yr Accounts for >220,000 Hosp. Admissions/yr England – 5.4/100,000/yr Incidence increases with Age The two most common causes: Gall stones Alcoholism 20% - idiopathic
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Acute pancreatitis cont…. Gallstones 30-60% of AP More in women ed in small GS,<5mm (Microlithiasis) Only 3-7% of GS P’ts develop AP Alcoholism 15-30% of AP More in men Dose dependant Only 10% of alcoholics develop AP
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Pathogenesis Inciting event – Not clearly known Alcohol ? Sensitization of acinar cells to CCK-induced premature activation Zymogens ? Toxic metabolites – acetaldehyde Fatty acid ethyl esterase ?Generation of oxidative stress Gallstone ?Obstruction of the ampulla: Blockage of drainage Reflux of bile ?Edema resulting from passage of stone Once began – Similar cascade of events
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Inappropriate intrapancreatic activation Of trypsinogen to trypsin trypsin Pancreatic autodigestion Activation of More trypsin Activation of other Enzyme cascades Complements Kallikrine-kinin Coagulation Fibrinolysis Activation of Chemotrypsine Phospholipase Elastase autodgestion Release of more active enzymes From injured cells More & wide Destruction (vicious cycle)
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Pathogenesis cont… Chemoattraction,activation & sequestration of neutrophils release of proinflammatory Cytokines and other mediators (TNF,IL-1,6,8 ; prostaglandins,leukotriens, Bradykinins,Histamine….) More Damage Systemic response: SIRS (vascular indothelial injury, microvascular thrombosis) Fever, ARDS, circulatory collapse shock, Renal failure, myocardial depression, DIC Infection (local/systemic) In 30% of p’ts with acute sever pancreatitis Cause: enteric organisms Compromized gut barrier Bacterial translocation lethal
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Diagnosis Characteristic abdominal pain Predisposing factor to pancreatitis Elevated serum amylase (>3x ULN) Problems with serum Amylase test Normal: If delay in taking sample(2-5days) Hypertriglyceridemia associated pancreatitis Ch. Pancreatitis ed in many other conditions: salivary g., liver, kidney, small int., fallopian tube Ca of lung, Esophagus, ovary, breast More specific tests: Serum -Lipase, -Trypsinogen-2,Trypsinogen activation P. Imaging modalities – X-ray, Abd.US, EUS, CT, MRI ERCP,MRCP
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Predicting severity 2 broad categories Edematous (mild): recovery in 5-7 days Necrotizing (sever) : high rate of complications mortality severity: defined by the presence of local/systemic complications Predicting severity Clinical assesment Scoring systems (Ranson,Glasgow,APACHE II..) Serum markers (CRP) CT scan (CT severity index)
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Clinical assesement Warning signs Thirst Poor urine output Progressing tachycardia Tachypnea Hypoxemia Agitation, confusion Rising Hct Lack of improvement in symptoms in the 1 st 48 hr Consider ICU admission!
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Risk factors that adversly affect survival Organ failure CVS: SBP 130/m Pulmonary: P o2 <60 mmhg Renal: oliguria(<50ml/hr) or ing BUN & Cr GI bleeding Pancreatic necrosis Obesity (BMI>30) Age >70 Hct >44% C-reactive protein >150mg/dl urinary trypsinogen activation peptide
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Local complications Pancreatic necrosis Pancreatic fluid collections abscess Pseudocysts Ascitis Pleural effusion
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Rx General principles of therapy Reversing pancreatic inflammation Correcting underlying predisposing factor Mild pancreatitis: Self-limited; subsides spontaneously in3-7days Supportive care (IV fluids, pain control), NPO Sever pancreatitis: - ICU care Fluid resuscitation: 250-300ml/hr for the 1 st 48hrs Asses O 2 saturation – supplemental O 2 maintain SpO 2 >95% Adequate pain control – IV opiates(Morphine,Meperidine) Nutritional support: Enteral feeding > TPN Preventing infections: three approaches Enteral feeding – Maintain gut barrier integrity ? Selective decontamination of the gut ? Prophylactic antibiotics
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Prophylactic antibiotics- controversial Initial studies (mid-1970s) failed to show benefit Recent meta-analysis of 8 controlled trials Reduced mortality An other meta-analysis(4 trials) Reduced infection & Mortality Subsequent,largest,multicenter, placebo controlled trial (114 p’ts, iv ciprofloxacilllin+metronidazol with placebo) – No benefit! Further doubt on the benefit Selection of resistant organisms Development of fungal infection
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Experimental agents Gabexate mesilate (proteinase inhibitor) Somatostatine, octreotide Correcting predisposing factor Gallstone pancreatitis Removal of the stones (ERCP) Cholecystectomy (to prevent recurrence) After recovery, prior to discharge Medication induced – Stop the drug Hypertriglyceridemia Low-fat diet, w’t reduction, Exercise, cessation of alcohol intake Surgery
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THANK YOU
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