1.Canine exocrine pancreatic insufficiency treated with porcine pancreatic extract.
Ju Won KIM ; Dong In JUNG ; Byeong Teck KANG ; Ha Jung KIM ; Chul PARK ; Eun Hee PARK ; Chae Young LIM ; Hee Myung PARK
Journal of Veterinary Science 2005;6(3):263-266
A 1. 8-year-old intact female Maltese dog was presented because of a history of chronic diarrhea, polyphagia, weight loss, and coprophagia. The patient was severely emaciated and evacuated very moist and four-smelling, yellow feces. Fecal stain with Sudan III revealed numerous lipid droplets. Result of fat absorption test showed aldigestion. A definite diagnosis was made based on trypsin-like immunoreactivity assay in serum which was low enough to be diagnosed as an exocrine pancreatic insufficiency. After pancreatic enzyme supplement with porcine pancreatin powder, the clinical signs were disappeared. This case report documents clinical manifestations, diagnostic tools, treatment and efficiency of oral pancreatic enzyme replacement therapy of exocrine pancreatic insufficiency in a Maltese dog.
Animals
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Dog Diseases/*drug therapy
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Dogs
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Exocrine Pancreatic Insufficiency/drug therapy/*veterinary
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Female
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Pancreatin/*therapeutic use
2.Total pancreatic necrosis after organophosphate intoxication.
Rui HOU ; Hongmin ZHANG ; Huan CHEN ; Yuankai ZHOU ; Yun LONG ; Dawei LIU
Frontiers of Medicine 2019;13(2):285-288
Cases of acute pancreatitis induced by organophosphate intoxication are encountered occasionally in clinics, but very few of them develop into severe pancreas necrosis and irreversible pancreatic function impairment. Here, we report a 47-year-old female organophosphate poisoning case after ingestion of massive insecticides; she was considered to have total necrosis and function failure of the pancreas via serum amylase test, glucose level test, and CT imaging. The patient exhibited no relief under the regular medicine treatment, which included sandostatin, antibiotics, intravenous atropine, and pralidoxime methiodide. She received percutaneous catheterization and drainage of pancreatic zone to expel hazardous necrotic waste, also by which the pathogenic evidence was obtained and the antibiotics were adjusted subsequently. The patient recovered gradually, was discharged after 2 weeks, and was prescribed with oral pancreatin capsules before meals and hypodermic insulin at meals and bedtime to compensate the impaired pancreatic function.
Acute Disease
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Anti-Bacterial Agents
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therapeutic use
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Catheterization
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Female
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Humans
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Insecticides
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poisoning
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Middle Aged
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Organophosphate Poisoning
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Pancreas
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diagnostic imaging
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pathology
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Pancreatin
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therapeutic use
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Pancreatitis
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chemically induced
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diagnostic imaging
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therapy
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Treatment Outcome