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Pancreatitis (Acute and Chronic)

Pancreatitis (Acute and Chronic)

Pancreatitis (Acute and Chronic)

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Pancreatitis Basics - Inflamed & Irritated

  • Acute Pancreatitis: Sudden inflammation; potentially reversible pancreatic damage.
  • Chronic Pancreatitis: Progressive inflammation; irreversible damage, fibrosis, endocrine/exocrine insufficiency.

Etiology (Acute): 📌 I GET SMASHED

  • Idiopathic, Gallstones, Ethanol, Trauma
  • Steroids, Mumps/Malignancy, Autoimmune, Scorpion sting, Hypercalcemia/Hypertriglyceridemia, ERCP, Drugs.

Etiology (Chronic): 📌 TIGAR-O

  • Toxic-metabolic, Idiopathic, Genetic, Autoimmune, Recurrent/severe acute pancreatitis, Obstructive.

⭐ Gallstones and alcohol are the most common causes of acute pancreatitis in India.

Acute Attack - Fiery Belly Fury

  • Pathophysiology: Premature pancreatic enzyme activation (e.g., trypsin) causes autodigestion and inflammation.
  • Clinical Features:
    • Sudden, severe epigastric pain, radiating to back; constant.
    • Nausea, vomiting, fever.
    • Abdominal tenderness.
    • Severe cases: Cullen's sign (periumbilical ecchymosis), Grey Turner's sign (flank ecchymosis). Cullen's sign in pancreatitis

⭐ Serum amylase and lipase are key diagnostic markers; lipase is more specific and stays elevated longer (often >3x ULN).

Acute Diagnosis & Severity - Sizing Up Sickness

  • Diagnosis (2 of 3): Characteristic pain; Amylase/Lipase ≥3x ULN; Imaging findings.
  • Investigations: Amylase, Lipase, LFT, CBC, CRP, Ca, LDH. USG (initial), CECT (necrosis, after 72h).
  • Severity Scoring:
    • Ranson's: 📌 GA LAW (Adm: Gluc, Age, LDH, AST, WBC) + C HOBBS (48h: Ca, Hct↓, O2, BUN, Base def, Fluid). Score ≥3=Severe.
    • APACHE II: ICU.
    • BISAP (0-24h): BUN >25, Impaired mental, SIRS, Age >60, Pleural eff. Score ≥3=↑mortality.

⭐ CECT abdomen is gold standard for necrosis/complications, best after 72 hours.

Acute Management & Complications - Dousing the Flames

  • Initial: NPO, aggressive IV fluids (250-500 mL/hr), analgesia.
  • Specifics: ERCP for gallstone pancreatitis (if cholangitis/obstruction). Nutritional support (enteral preferred over parenteral, initiate early if severe). Antibiotics for infected necrosis ONLY.
  • Local Complications: Pancreatic pseudocyst, acute necrotic collection (ANC), walled-off necrosis (WON), abscess, splenic/portal vein thrombosis.
  • Systemic Complications: ARDS, renal failure, DIC, hypocalcemia (📌 Saponification of peripancreatic fat).

⭐ Early aggressive fluid resuscitation is a cornerstone of acute pancreatitis management. CT: Pancreatic pseudocyst in pancreatitis

Chronic Pancreatitis - Smoldering Pain & Problems

  • Pathophysiology: Progressive inflammation, fibrosis, and irreversible parenchymal/ductal destruction. Leads to exocrine (maldigestion, steatorrhea) & endocrine (pancreatogenic diabetes) insufficiency.
  • Clinical Features:
    • Chronic, often severe, epigastric pain radiating to back.
    • Steatorrhea, weight loss.
    • Diabetes mellitus (Type 3c).

    ⭐ Pancreatic calcification, visible on imaging, is a hallmark, especially in alcoholic chronic pancreatitis. CT showing pancreatic calcifications and dilated ductoka

Chronic Diagnosis & Management - Long-Haul Care

  • Dx: Clinical; Imaging (CT/MRCP/EUS: calcifications, ductal irregularity, atrophy); PFTs (fecal elastase <200 µg/g, secretin test).
  • Rx:
    • Pain: Analgesics (NSAIDs, opioids), celiac plexus block.
    • PERT: 25,000-50,000 lipase units/meal.
    • Lifestyle: No alcohol/smoking.
    • Endoscopic (stent, stones) / Surgical (Puestow for dilated main duct, Frey for head dominant disease).
  • Complications: Pseudocysts, biliary/duodenal obstruction, ↑pancreatic cancer risk.

⭐ Fecal elastase-1 (<200 µg/g) is a sensitive, specific non-invasive test for pancreatic exocrine insufficiency.

EUS of chronic pancreatitis: parenchymal/ductal changes

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Acute pancreatitis: Sudden epigastric pain radiating to back, ↑ serum amylase/lipase (>3x ULN).
  • Most common causes of acute pancreatitis: Gallstones (cholelithiasis) and alcohol abuse.
  • Severity scoring in acute pancreatitis: Ranson's criteria, BISAP, and APACHE II.
  • Chronic pancreatitis triad: Pancreatic calcifications on imaging, steatorrhea, and diabetes mellitus.
  • MRCP/EUS are key for diagnosing chronic pancreatitis; ERCP can be therapeutic.
  • Pancreatic pseudocyst: A common fluid collection, a key complication of pancreatitis.

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