Acute Pancreatitis - Fiery Flare-Up
- Sudden pancreatic inflammation. Key symptoms: severe epigastric pain (often radiating to back), nausea, vomiting.
- 📌 Pediatric Causes: Trauma, Drugs (valproate, L-asparaginase, steroids), Viral (Mumps, Coxsackie B), Systemic (CF, Kawasaki, HUS, IBD), Biliary/Anatomic (choledochal cyst, pancreas divisum), Idiopathic/Inherited (PRSS1, SPINK1).
- Diagnosis (≥2 of 3 criteria):
- Characteristic acute onset, persistent, severe epigastric abdominal pain.
- Serum lipase or amylase activity ≥3x ULN (Upper Limit of Normal).
- Characteristic findings on abdominal imaging (USG, CECT, or MRI).
- Investigations: Serum lipase (preferred), amylase. USG abdomen (initial). CECT if diagnosis uncertain or for complications (e.g., necrosis) after 48-72 hrs.
- Management:
- Supportive care: Nil Per Oral (NPO) initially, transitioning to early enteral nutrition if tolerated. Aggressive IV fluid resuscitation. Analgesia (opioids).
- Monitor: Vital signs, urine output, electrolytes.
- Treat underlying cause (e.g., ERCP for choledocholithiasis).
- Complications: Pancreatic pseudocyst, necrosis, abscess; Systemic: SIRS, ARDS, renal failure.
⭐ Serum lipase is preferred over amylase for diagnosing acute pancreatitis in children due to its higher sensitivity and specificity, and longer half-life.

Chronic Pancreatitis & EPI - Lasting Ache & Leak
- Chronic Pancreatitis (CP): Irreversible pancreatic damage, fibrosis, and ductal stricturing.
- Causes: Alcohol (adults), tropical pancreatitis (common in India, early onset, large duct stones), genetic (CFTR, SPINK1, PRSS1), autoimmune.
⭐ Cystic fibrosis is the leading genetic cause of chronic pancreatitis and exocrine pancreatic insufficiency in children.
- Symptoms: Persistent/recurrent epigastric pain (radiates to back), malabsorption (steatorrhea, weight loss), diabetes mellitus.
- Diagnosis: Imaging shows calcifications (X-ray, CT), ductal dilation/strictures (MRCP - "chain of lakes" appearance), pancreatic atrophy.

- Exocrine Pancreatic Insufficiency (EPI): Reduced pancreatic enzyme secretion leading to maldigestion.
- Symptoms: Steatorrhea (bulky, foul-smelling, greasy stools), weight loss, fat-soluble vitamin (A, D, E, K) deficiencies.
- Diagnosis: Fecal elastase-1 < 200 µg/g stool (severe EPI < 100 µg/g).
- Management: Pancreatic Enzyme Replacement Therapy (PERT), vitamin supplementation.
- 📌 Mnemonic (EPI symptoms): Steatorrhea, Abdominal pain/distension, Decreased weight/vitamin deficiency (SAD).
Congenital & Other Issues - Twisted Tubes, Rare Lumps
- Annular Pancreas
- Embryology: Ventral bud malrotation; encircles 2nd part of duodenum.
- Sx: Neonatal duodenal obstruction, bilious/non-bilious vomiting.
- Dx: X-ray ('double bubble' sign).

- Tx: Surgical bypass (duodenoduodenostomy).
- Pancreas Divisum
- Most common; failed fusion of ventral/dorsal ducts.
- Often asymptomatic; can cause recurrent pancreatitis.
- Dx: MRCP, ERCP (gold standard). Tx: Symptomatic - endoscopic sphincterotomy.
- Ectopic Pancreas
- Pancreatic tissue in stomach, duodenum, Meckel's. Usually asymptomatic.
- Rare Tumors
- Pancreatoblastoma: Most common malignant tumor in childhood (< 10 yrs); ↑ AFP.
- Solid Pseudopapillary Neoplasm (SPN): Adolescent females; low malignant potential.
⭐ Annular pancreas typically presents in neonates with duodenal obstruction, vomiting (often bilious), and a characteristic 'double bubble' sign on abdominal X-ray.
Diagnostic & Management Pearls - Pancreas Pointers
- Key Labs:
- Serum Lipase: ↑ in 4-8h, peaks 24h, normalizes 8-14d. More specific than amylase.
- Serum Amylase: ↑ in 6-12h, normalizes 3-5d.
- Trypsinogen (IRT): Newborn screen for Cystic Fibrosis.
- Exocrine Function:
- Fecal Elastase-1: Measures enzyme output.
⭐ Fecal elastase-1 is a highly sensitive and specific non-invasive test for assessing exocrine pancreatic function, particularly useful in children with suspected malabsorption.
- Imaging:
- USG: Initial; gallstones, pseudocysts.
- CT/MRI/MRCP: Severity, complications, ductal anatomy.
- Management Core:
- Acute: IV fluids, analgesia, NPO (brief), early enteral nutrition.
- Chronic: Pain control, PERT, fat-soluble vitamins.
- Address underlying cause.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Cystic fibrosis: leading cause of exocrine pancreatic insufficiency in children.
- Acute pancreatitis in children: often due to trauma, viral infections (mumps), or medications.
- Recurrent/chronic pancreatitis: consider genetic mutations (PRSS1, CFTR).
- Pancreatic pseudocysts: common after acute pancreatitis or abdominal trauma.
- Serum lipase: more specific than amylase for diagnosing acute pancreatitis.
- Shwachman-Diamond syndrome: features pancreatic insufficiency, neutropenia, skeletal abnormalities.
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