1.9 Acute Pancreatitis Flashcards
Contrast pathology, serology, symptoms, and CT findings for Acute vs Chronic Pancreatitis
- Acute
- Pathology: neutrophilic inflammatory rxn
- Serology: increased amylase and lipase
- Sx: Almost always painful crisis
- CT: swelling, stranding of peripancreatic fat
- Chronic
- Patho: Mononuclear infiltration and fibrosis
- Serology: Tend to be normal due to pancreatic burnout
- Sx: Pain btwn asx periods of time
- CT: Fibrosis, strictures, calcifications
What are the 8 main categories of causes of Acute Pancreatitis, and specific examples of these?
- Congenital
- Anomalies, familial, cystic fibrosis, hereditary angioedema
- Toxic
- EtOH, scorpion venom
- Obstructive (pancreatic duct)
- Gallstones, tumor
- Metabolic
- Hypercalcemia, hypertriglyceridemia
- Trauma
- Blunt vs penetrating
- Ischemia
- Shock, low flow
- Drugs
- ERCP contrast, thiazide diuretics, corticosteroids, cyclosporine, azathioprine, sulfonamides, estrogens
- Infections
- HIV, CMV, salmonella
Your patient who presents with pancreatitis may have the following symptoms.
What are key markers to look out for in the physical exam?
You take their labs/diagnostics: what do you look for and what do you find?
Presentation
- Abd pain
- Epigastric stabbing, twisting
- Radiates to back
- Nausea and vomiting
- Low grade fever (inflammation)
- Hemodynamic instability occurs rapidly
- SIRS
Physical Exam
- LUQ pain on palpation, extending to RUQ
- Guarding
- Turn!
- Cullen’s Sign
- Umbilical discoloration
- Grey-Turner’s sign
- Flank discoloration
- Cullen’s Sign
Labs:
- Amylase > 100
- Lipase > 24 (more specific)
- Lipase 3x normal indicates pancreatitis
- Rises in 4-8h
- Peaks in 24h
- Calcium: low
- Total protein: low
- Bilirubin: elevation may indicate ‘gallstone’ etiology of pancreatitis
Diagnostics:
- CT gold standard
- Abd US can r/o other causes
- Can assess for ductal obstruction
- APACHEII > 7 predict severe acute panc
- Ranson’s criteria s/p 48h
Your patient has acute pancreatitis on CT, and you calculate the Ranson’s criteria. How is the scoring broken down, and what’s the interpretation of the score?
- Ranson’s
- On Admission: 1 pt for each
- WBC > 16k
- Age > 55
- BG > 200
- AST > 250
- LDH > 350
- Within 48h: 1 pt for each
- Hct < 10% from admission
- BUN > over 5mg/dL from admission
- Serum Calcium < 8
- Arterial pO2 < 60
- Base deficit > 4
- Fluid needs over 6L
- Interpretation
- Score < 3, severe panc unlikely
- Score > 3, severe panc likely
- 0-2: 0-3% mortality
- 3-5: 11-15% mortality
- >6: 40% mortality
- On Admission: 1 pt for each
Describe the recommendations re: fluid resucitation for acute pancreatitis
- IV fluid to prevent organ hypoperfusion and hypovolemia
- LR 250-500ml/h in first 12-24h
- Unless CV, renal, or related comorbidities!
- Check fluid requirements Q6h for 24-48h
- Goal of aggressive hydration is to decrease BUN and/or Hct
- Use goal-directed therapy, not judicious fluids
- Risk of abd compartment syndrome and respiratory complications
- Use same strategy as septic shock
- Moderate fluid and pressors as needed
- MAP goal 65 or above
- LR preferred
- Caution if hyperkalemic, hypercalcemic
Apart from fluids, what interventions are available for acute pancreatitis?
- ERCP
- HIDA scan
- EUS
- Gallstone Pancreatitis
- Mild: Cholecystectomy within 2 wks
- Severe: ERCP within 72h of admission to reduce morbidity and mortality
- Choledocholithiasis
- Single Stage Approach: Laporascopy vs open cholecystectomy with intraoperative MRCP/exploration
- Two Stage: Pre-op ERCP w/wo EUS, followed by lap or open cholecystectomy
- Open surgical debridement
- Skunk procedure
- Advance catheters/drains over guidewires into infected area with closed continuous lavage
How you gonna manage acute pancreatitis pain?
How bout nutrition?
- Opioids
- IV PCA dilaudid vs fentanyl
- Nutrition
- Modulates exudative stress response
- Infxtive complications may arise from gut bacteria due to weakening of intestinal barrier
- So feed ‘em!
- Mild Pancreatitis: mild, low-fat, soft or full if pain is getting better
- Severe: enteral nutrition preferred over parenteral (NG or NJ)
- Enteral maintains intestinal motility, preserving gut barrier function and minimizing secondary infection
What complications do you look out for in your acute panc patient?
- Pseudocysts
- Ileus
- Pleural effusions
- ARDS/ALI
- PE
- Thrombosis - prothrombic effects
- GI hemorrhage - spleen, gastroduodenal, pancreatic duodenal arteries
- Necrotizing pancreatitis
- Shock (hypovolemic vs distributive)
- Acute MI
- Stroke
- Abd compartment syndrome
- 3rd spacing into peritoneal/retroperitoneal cavities
- Chronic pancreatitis
When, if ever, will you recommend abx treatment for acute pancreatitis? Describe the treatment
- Abx NOT warrented UNLESS there is abscess or necrosis
- Infected necrosis: require abx
- Pt deteriorating, clinically unstable, septic
- Increasing WBC and fever
- Failure to improve
- Presence of gas within necrosis
- Carbapenem: monotherapy appropriate
- If cannot have carbapenem:
- Quinolone OR ceftazadime OR cefepime
- AND metronidazole
- Quinolone OR ceftazadime OR cefepime
- If cannot have carbapenem:
- Necrosectomy
- Should consider if percutaneous drain and conservative mgmt fail
Describe monitoring your patient over the first 48h of admission for acute pancreatitis
- VS, SpO2 > 90%
- ABGs
- Hypoxia: atelectasis vs pleural effusions vs intrapulmonary shunts vs ARDS
- UO > 0.5-1cc/kg/h
- Lytes closely monitored
- Aggressive fluid resuscitation
- Hypocalcemia corrected if
- Ionized calcium low
- Neuromuscular irratibility
- Risk for abd compartment syndrome