Chapter 54: Pancreas- Chronic Pancreatitis Flashcards
What is it?
Chronic inflammation of the pancreas region causing destruction of the parenchyma, fibrosis, and calcification, resulting in loss of endocrine and exocrine tissue
What are the subtypes?
- Chronic calcific pancreatitis
- Chronic obstructive pancreatitis (5%)
What are the causes?
- Alcohol abuse (most common; 70% of cases)
- Idiopathic (15%)
- Hypercalcemia (hyperparathyroidism)
- Hyperlipidemia
- Familial (found in families without any other risk factors)
- Trauma
- Iatrogenic
- Gallstones
What are the symptoms?
Epigastric and/or back pain, weight loss, steatorrhea
What are the associated signs?
- Type 1 diabetes mellitus (up to 1/3)
- Steatorrhea (up to 1/4)
- weight loss
What are the signs of pancreatic exocrine insufficiency?
- Steatorrhea
- (fat malabsorption from lipase insufficiency—stools float in water)
- Malnutrition
What are the signs of pancreatic endocrine insufficiency?
Diabetes (glucose intolerance)
What are the common pain patterns?
- Unrelenting pain
- Recurrent pain
What is the differential diagnosis?
- PUD
- biliary tract disease
- AAA
- pancreatic cancer
- angina
What percentage of patients with chronic pancreatitis have or will
develop pancreatic cancer?
≈2%
What are the appropriate lab tests?
- Amylase/lipase
- 72-hour fecal fat analysis
- Glucose tolerance test (IDDM)
Why may amylase/lipase be normal in a patient with chronic
pancreatitis?
Because of extensive pancreatic tissue loss (“burned-out pancreas”)
What radiographic tests should be performed?
-
CT scan
- Has greatest sensitivity for gland enlargement/atrophy, calcifications
- masses, pseudocysts
-
KUB
- Calcification in the pancreas
-
ERCP
- Ductal irregularities with dilation and stenosis (“chain of lakes”)
- pseudocysts
What is the medical treatment?
- Discontinuation of alcohol use
- can reduce attacks
- parenchymal damage continues secondary to ductal obstruction and fibrosis
- Insulin for type 1 diabetes mellitus
- Pancreatic enzyme replacement
- Narcotics for pain
What is the surgical treatment?
- Puestow—longitudinal pancreaticojejunostomy (pancreatic duct must be dilated)
- Duval—distal pancreaticojejunostomy
- Near-total pancreatectomy