Acute Pancreatitis Flashcards
What is acute pancreatitis?
Condition where the pancreas becomes inflamed (swollen) over a short period of time
What are the causes of acute pancreatitis?
I GET SMASHED:
Iatrogenic
Gallstones
Ethanol abuse
Trauma
Spider bites Mumps Autoimmune Steroids Hypercalaemia or hyperlipidaemia ERCP Drugs
What are some risk factors of acute pancreatitis?
Age Afro-caribbean ethnicity Gender Obesity Type 2 diabetes Family history
How can acute pancreatitis be diagnosed? (2 of 3 criteria)
2 of 3 following:
Clinical features consistent with pancreatitis (e.g. classical-sounding pain)
Elevation of serum amylase OR serum lipase (at least 3x the upper limit)
Radiological features (e.g. inflammation shown on CT or ultrasound)
How do you classify acute pancreatitis? (Glasgow score)
PANCREAS:
PaO2 <8kPa Age >55 years old Neutrophilia Calcium < 2 mmol/L Renal function - urea > 16 mmol/L Enzymes - LDH > 600 iu/L; AST > 200iu/L Albumin <3.2 g/L (serum)
Sugar - blood glucose > 10 mmol/L
How many hours after admission can the Glasgow score predict severity of acute pancreatitis?
48 hours
What is the first-line management of acute pancreatitis?
IV fluids, catheterisation, O2, analgesia, nutritional support.
How do we alleviate pain symptoms of acute pancreatitis?
- IV paracetamol or IV morphine
- Then add IV antiemetics
(Consider benzodiazepines if withdrawing from alcohol)