2. Pancreatitis Flashcards
Types of pancreatitis
- Acute pancreatitis
2. Chronic pancreatitis
Definition of pancreatitis
Inflammation of the pancreas associated with injury to the exocrine pancreas; ranges from a transient attack to a permanent loss of function
Definition of acute pancreatitis
Reversible pancreatic parenchymal injury associated with inflammation
Causes of acute pancreatitis
- Obstruction of pancreatic duct system
- Cholelithiasis
- Periampullary neoplasms
- Pancreas divisum
- Choledochal cysts
- Parasites - Alcoholism
- Infections
- Mumps virus, Ascaris lumbricoides, Clonorchis sinensis - Acute ischemia
- Shock, thrombosis, embolism, vasculitis - Drugs
- Furosemide, azathioprine, estrogens - Hyperlipoproteinemia
- Hypercalcemia
- Mechanical causes
- Trauma, iatrogenic - Hereditary pancreatitis
- AD form: trypsinogen mutation rendering trypsin resistant to inactivating cleavage by another trypsin
- AR form: trypsin inhibitor mutation
I GET SMASHED Idiopathic Gall stones Ethanol Trauma Steroids Mumps Autoimmune Scorpion venom Hyperlipidemia/Hypercalcemia ERCP Drugs (OCT)
Pathogenesis of acute pancreatitis
- Initiating event:
- Due to causes of pancreatic duct obstruction leading to interstitial edema which impairs blood flow resulting in ischemic damage, & also due to accumulation of lipases causing local fat necrosis
- Due to causes of direct acinar cell injury, resulting in release of intracellular proenzymes & lysosomal hydrolases, which activates proenzymes - Either way, initiating event leads to further acinar cell injury, which results in local activation of pancreatic enzymes, leading to:
- Interstitial edema & inflammation
- Proteolysis (proteases)
- Fat necrosis (lipases, phospholipases)
- Hemorrhage (elastase)
Morphology of acute pancreatitis
- [Grossly]
- Hemorrhage & necrosis
- Fat necrosis of adipose tissue (within pancreas, peripancreatic fat, omentum & mesentery)
- Fat saponification (when fat necrosis is combined with calcium salt)
- Chicken broth peritoneal fluid (serous, slightly turbid brown- tinged fluid; due to fat necrosis releasing fat globules into peritoneal fluid) - [Histologically]
- Inflammatory infiltrate
- Interstitial edema
- Areas of fat necrosis (adipocytes containing amorphous material due to deposition of calcium salts within them)
Clinical features acute pancreatitis
- Signs & symptoms:
- Intense, constant abdominal pain, often referred to the upper back or even to the left shoulder - Laboratory findings:
- Raised serum amylase & lipase
- Conjugated hyperbilirubinemia (if obstruction is common to pancreatic & biliary ducts)
- Glycosuria (due to damage to endocrine pancreas)
- Hypocalcemia (due to draining of calcium in fat saponification; poor prognostic sign)
Pathological Effects & Complications of acute pancreatitis
- Systemic organ failure
- Shock, ARDS, acute renal failure - Pancreatic abscess formation
- Pancreatic pseudocyst formation
- A pseudocyst has no true epithelial lining, just a focus of necrotic material walled off by fibrous/granulation tissue
- Cannot be excised, has to be drained
- May be subsequently infected by gut microbes
- May lead to chronic pancreatitis - Duodenal obstruction
Definition of chronic pancreatitis
Inflammation of the pancreas with irreversible destruction of the exocrine parenchyma, fibrosis & in the late stages, destruction of the endocrine parenchyma
Causes of chronic pancreatitis
- Long-term alcohol abuse (most common cause)
- Long-standing pancreatic duct obstruction
- Pseudocysts (complication of acute pancreatitis)
- Calculi
- Trauma
- Pancreas divisum
- Neoplasms - Hereditary causes (same as those for acute pancreatitis)
- Cystic fibrosis
- Autoimmune (lymphoplasmacytic sclerosing pancreatitis)
Pathogenesis of chronic pancreatitis
Progressive destruction of pancreas by repeated flare-ups of mild & subclinical types of acute pancreatitis
Morphology of chronic pancreatitis
- Atrophy of acini
- Dilated ducts containing protein plugs
- Interlobular fibrosis & chronic inflammatory infiltrate
- Calcifications
- Pseudocysts
- Remaining surviving islets embedded in a sclerotic background
Pathological Effects & Complications of chronic pancreatitis
- Chronic malabsorption (due to deficiency in exocrine pancreatic enzymes required for digestion of food)
- Diabetes mellitus (due to loss of islets of Langerhans)