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Acute Pancreatitis: Causes, Symptoms, Diagnosis, and Management, Study notes of Epidemiology

What is the Glasgow scoring system for severity? Glasgow criteria for predicting severity: PANCREAS mnemonic. • PaO2 <8Kpa. • Age < 55yrs. • Neutrophils (WBC > ...

Typology: Study notes

2021/2022

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Acute Pancreatitis
Definition of acute pancreatitis:
Inflammation of the pancreas, ranging from mild, self-limiting disease to complete necrosis of the entire
organ.
By definition, acute pancreatitis occurs on the background of a normal pancreas and can return to normal
on resolution (cf. chronic pancreatitis, which has irreversible changes)
Epidemiology of acute pancreatitis:
About 300 cases per million per year
Of these, 20% are mild and resolve without serious complications
Causes of acute pancreatitis:
I Idiopathic (most common)
G Gallstones
E Ethanol
T Trauma
S Steroids
M Mumps
A Autoimmune (eg. PAN)
S Scorpion Venom black Trinidadian scorpion (tityus trinitatis)
H Hyperlipidaemia, Hypercalcaemia
E ERCP
D Drugs (azathioprine, thiazides, valproate, asparaginase, allopurinol)
And Pregnancy
Presentations of acute pancreatitis:
History:
o Severe epigastric pain, radiating through to the back
o Pain worse on lying down and relieved sitting forward
o Vomiting
o Recent excess alcohol intake
o Previous gallstone disease
o FHx gallstones
Examination:
o Tachycardia
o Fever
o Abdominal/epigastric tenderness
o Jaundice
o Rigid abdomen
o Reduced bowel sounds
o Periumbilical staining (Cullen’s sign)
o Flank staining (Grey-Turner’s sign)
o Shock
Differential diagnosis of acute pancreatitis:
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Acute Pancreatitis

Definition of acute pancreatitis: Inflammation of the pancreas, ranging from mild, self-limiting disease to complete necrosis of the entire organ.

By definition, acute pancreatitis occurs on the background of a normal pancreas and can return to normal on resolution (cf. chronic pancreatitis, which has irreversible changes)

Epidemiology of acute pancreatitis:  About 300 cases per million per year  Of these, 20% are mild and resolve without serious complications

Causes of acute pancreatitis:  I – Idiopathic (most common)  G – Gallstones  E – Ethanol  T – Trauma  S – Steroids  M – Mumps  A – Autoimmune (eg. PAN)  S – Scorpion Venom – black Trinidadian scorpion (tityus trinitatis)  H – Hyperlipidaemia, Hypercalcaemia  E – ERCP  D – Drugs (azathioprine, thiazides, valproate, asparaginase, allopurinol)  And Pregnancy

Presentations of acute pancreatitis:  History: o Severe epigastric pain, radiating through to the back o Pain worse on lying down and relieved sitting forward o Vomiting o Recent excess alcohol intake o Previous gallstone disease o FHx gallstones

 Examination: o Tachycardia o Fever o Abdominal/epigastric tenderness o Jaundice o Rigid abdomen o Reduced bowel sounds o Periumbilical staining (Cullen’s sign) o Flank staining (Grey-Turner’s sign) o Shock

Differential diagnosis of acute pancreatitis:

 Any other cause of an acute abdomen  Myocardial infarction  Pericarditis  Aortic dissection

Scoring systems for severity of acute pancreatitis:

Glasgow criteria for predicting severity: PANCREAS mnemonic  PaO 2 <8Kpa  Age < 55yrs  Neutrophils (WBC > 15)  Calcium <2mmol/L  Renal function (Urea > 16)  Enzymes (LDH > 600, AST > 200)  Albumin < 32g/L  Sugar > 10mmol/L

3 or more positive factors predicts a severe pancreatitis and the patient should be managed in an HDU/ITU setting.

Initial management of acute pancreatitis: Current BSG guidance http://www.bsg.org.uk/images/stories/docs/clinical/guidelines/pancreatic/pancreatic.pdf  Blood tests: o Amylase – often >1000 but CAN be normal initially (esp if acute on chronic) o Lipase – more sensitive and specific than amylase but less readily available as a test o FBC (for neutrophils), U+Es (assess renal function), LFTs (for albumin and transaminases/bilirubin), Calcium  Arterial blood gas  Intravenous fluids – patients need prompt and adequate fluid resuscitation  Oxygen supplementation  Analgesia – patients usually require regular opiates  Feeding – if nutritional support is required then the enteral route should be the preferred option if this is tolerated.

Further management of acute pancreatitis:  Antibiotics – Current evidence is not conclusive regarding prophylactic antibiotics to prevent infection of necrosis.  Antisecretory agents – there is no evidence to support the use of these in acute pancreatitis.  CT abdomen – current guidelines recommend this be done after 6-10 days if persisting signs of organ failure, ongoing sepsis or clinical deterioration. This can be performed earlier if there remains significant diagnostic uncertainty.  ERCP – urgent therapeutic ERCP with sphincterotomy should be performed within 72 hours in patients with acute severe pancreatitis and evidence of jaundice/common bile duct dilatation/cholangitis.  Surgical intervention – all patients with infected necrosis will require radiological or surgical drainage and/or surgical debridement.

Complications of acute pancreatitis:  Early: o Shock o Acute kidney injury

o Acute kidney injury o Acute respiratory distress syndrome o DIC o Sepsis o Hypocalcaemia o Hyperglycaemia o Pancreatic necrosis  Late: o Pancreatic necrosis o Pancreatic pseudocyst o Pancreatic fluid in lesser sac  Fluid in lesser sca  Presents > 6 weeks later  Abdominal mass may be present  May need internal (via stomach) or external drainage o Abscess o Thrombosis – splenic/gastroduodenal arteries o Fistulae