1.Are Serum Immunoglobulin and Tumor Marker Helpful in Differentiating Autoimmune Pancreatitis from Pancreatobiliary Malignancies?.
The Korean Journal of Gastroenterology 2013;61(6):301-302
No abstract available.
Autoimmune Diseases/*diagnosis
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Female
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Humans
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Male
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Pancreatic Neoplasms/*diagnosis
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Pancreatitis, Chronic/*diagnosis
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Tumor Markers, Biological/*blood
2.Inflamed Bipedal Nodules with a Distant Occult Cause.
Harumi OCHI ; Evelyn Yx TAY ; Joyce Ss LEE ; Hong Liang TEY
Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore 2016;45(6):267-269
Acute Disease
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Aged
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Amylases
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blood
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Humans
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Lipase
;
blood
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Magnetic Resonance Imaging
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Male
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Pancreatitis
;
complications
;
diagnosis
;
diagnostic imaging
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Pancreatitis, Chronic
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complications
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diagnosis
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Panniculitis
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diagnosis
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diagnostic imaging
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etiology
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pathology
3.Immunoglobulin G4-related disease with features of Mikulicz's disease and autoimmune pancreatitis which firstly presented as asymptomatic lymphadenopathy: a case report.
Yue WU ; Zhe-Rong XU ; Wen-Jing ZHOU ; Yun-Mei YANG
Chinese Medical Journal 2015;128(5):706-707
Aged, 80 and over
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Autoimmune Diseases
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blood
;
diagnosis
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Humans
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Immunoglobulin G
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blood
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Lymphatic Diseases
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blood
;
diagnosis
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Male
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Mikulicz' Disease
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blood
;
diagnosis
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Pancreatitis
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blood
;
diagnosis
4.Clinical Characteristics, Recurrence Features, and Treatment Outcomes of Autoimmune Pancreatitis.
The Korean Journal of Gastroenterology 2008;52(4):265-267
No abstract available.
Autoimmune Diseases/*diagnosis/therapy
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Humans
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Immunoglobulin G/blood
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Pancreatitis, Chronic/*diagnosis/pathology/therapy
5.Clinical Characteristics, Recurrence Features, and Treatment Outcomes of Autoimmune Pancreatitis.
The Korean Journal of Gastroenterology 2008;52(4):265-267
No abstract available.
Autoimmune Diseases/*diagnosis/therapy
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Humans
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Immunoglobulin G/blood
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Pancreatitis, Chronic/*diagnosis/pathology/therapy
6.Autoimmune Pancreatitis:Typing,Diagnosis,and Treatment.
Acta Academiae Medicinae Sinicae 2016;38(6):731-734
Autoimmune pancreatitis (AIP),a special type of chronic pancreatitis,is autoimmune-mediated and can be accompanied by swelling of the pancreas and irregular stenosis of the pancreatic duct. The main pathological features are fibrosis of pancreatic duct with IgG4-positive lymphoplasmacytic infiltration. Different typing methods of AIP can have differerent disease conditions. This paper reviews the history,clinical presentation,diagnostic criteria,and treatment of different AIP types to provide a new basis for the diagnosis and treatment.
Autoimmune Diseases
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diagnosis
;
therapy
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Fibrosis
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Humans
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Immunoglobulin G
;
blood
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Pancreas
;
physiopathology
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Pancreatitis
;
diagnosis
;
therapy
7.A Case of Diabetic Ketoacidosis Caused by Dapsone-Induced Acute Pancreatitis.
Jung Bum SEO ; Kwang Hee SHIN ; Min Ji KIM ; Ji Eun PARK ; Keun Kyu PARK ; Jung Guk KIM ; In Kyu LEE ; Sung Woo KIM
Journal of Korean Diabetes 2016;17(4):282-287
Drug-induced pancreatitis accounts for 0.1~2.0% of all pancreatitis cases. Generally, the mechanism of drug-induced pancreatitis is an immune reaction, accumulation of toxic material, and/or ischemia. However, how dapsone causes pancreatitis remains unclear. A 61-year-old man presented with a 2-week history of epigastric discomfort. He had taken dapsone for 2 months to treat psoriasis. Laboratory findings showed high blood glucose levels and metabolic acidosis; however, hemoglobin A1c was low. Serum amylase and lipase levels were elevated to 125/4,479 U/L. Abdominal computed tomography was indicative of pancreatitis. There was no causative history of pancreatitis and no other medication history except dapsone. Thus, we reached a diagnosis of diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) followed by dapsone-induced pancreatitis. The patient fasted and was treated with insulin administration and fluid hydration in accordance with treatment guidelines. After treatment, amylase and lipase decreased and symptoms subsided, but insulin injection was required to control blood glucose levels. Drug-induced pancreatitis is a very rare adverse effect of dapsone. Only four cases of pancreatitis related to dapsone could be found in a PubMed search. Moreover, diabetes caused by dapsone-induced pancreatitis has not been reported previously. Here, we report a case of DKA caused by dapsoneinduced acute pancreatitis.
Acidosis
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Amylases
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Blood Glucose
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Dapsone
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Diabetic Ketoacidosis*
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Diagnosis
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Humans
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Insulin
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Ischemia
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Lipase
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Middle Aged
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Pancreatitis*
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Psoriasis
8.Progress on diagnosis and therapy of childhood acute pancreatitis.
Chinese Journal of Contemporary Pediatrics 2007;9(4):392-395
Acute Disease
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Bacterial Translocation
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C-Reactive Protein
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analysis
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Calcitonin
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blood
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Child
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Humans
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Pancreatitis
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diagnosis
;
etiology
;
therapy
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Protein Precursors
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blood
9.Clinical characteristics of children with acute pancreatitis.
Yi-Min ZHU ; Fang LIU ; Xiao-Yu ZHOU ; Jie-Yu YOU ; Zhi-Yue XU ; Yu-Kai DU
Chinese Journal of Pediatrics 2011;49(1):10-16
OBJECTIVETo analyze the characteristics of children with acute pancreatitis and provide the basis of early diagnosis and treatment.
METHODSTotally 121 children with acute pancreatitis admitted to Hunan Children's Hospital between March 2003 and December 2009 were enrolled in this retrospective study. The data of clinical manifestations, biochemical examinations, imaging and prognosis were summarized and statistically analyzed.
RESULTSOf the 121 cases, preschool and school-age children were the main groups, and the prevalent months were May and June. Abdominal pain (88.4%) and vomiting (61.2%) were the major initial symptoms of pancreatitis in children, but none of children under the age 1 year complained of abdominal pain; 70.2% had signs of abdominal tenderness, accompanied by abdominal rigidity, distension, hepatomegaly, jaundice, etc. Severe patients developed shock, convulsions, coma and so on. Serum amylase concentration increased to above the upper reference limit in 114 children (94.2%) when they admitted within 24 hours after admission. Urine amylase elevation was noted in 77 children (79.4%). The amylase concentration decreased after 3 days, but not all returned to normal 14 days afterward. Children with sustained serum amylase elevation or serum amylase level ≥ 3 times upper limit of normal range more likely to have fever, vomiting, abdominal distension, and pancreatic abnormalities at ultrasonography or CT which showed that the echo of pancreas decreased or enhanced, pancreas edema, pancreatic duct expanded, etc. Abdominal ultrasonography and CT showed that 75 cases (62.0%) had other organ damage besides pancreatitis, liver (25.3%) and intestinal (16.0%) damages were very common, while liver and myocardial damages were seen frequently in the laboratory examinations, which complicated with serum ALT/AST, total bilirubin, blood glucose elevation and myocardial enzyme abnormalities. Several gastroscopic examinations showed mucosal hyperemia and edema, sheet-like erosion, etc. Except for one case who underwent laparotomy, all the remaining children were treated with non-operative comprehensive treatment. Of them 119 were cured or improved, 2 died and 5 had recurred disease later.
CONCLUSIONSGastrointestinal symptoms were the main clinical manifestations of acute pancreatitis in children, often complicated with extrapancreatic damage. The younger the patient was, the less complaint of abdominal pain they had. This indicates that acute pancreatitis should be considered when children suffered from acute abdominal pain and vomiting which had no known cause or could not be explained. It is important to do take serial monitoring of serum amylase, and imaging procedures.
Adolescent ; Amylases ; blood ; Child ; Child, Preschool ; Female ; Humans ; Infant ; Male ; Pancreatitis, Acute Necrotizing ; blood ; diagnosis ; Prognosis ; Retrospective Studies
10.A Case of Idiopathic Pancreatitis in a Patient with Crohn's Disease.
Chan Bok PARK ; Won MOON ; Pyoung Rak CHOI ; Dong Han IM ; Eun Kyung SHIN ; Kyu Jong KIM ; Moo In PARK ; Seun Ja PARK
The Korean Journal of Gastroenterology 2009;53(4):251-256
Pancreatitis has been occasionally associated with Crohn's disease (CD). A definite etiology of pancreatitis can be identified in most patients, but a very small proportion remain idiopathic. We report a case of idiopathic pancreatitis resolved along with the clinical improvement of CD in a 25-year-old man. He presented with abdominal pain and diarrhea for 8 years. Ileocolonoscopy and enteroclysis showed multiple, longitudinal ulcers and strictures at the ileojejunum. The laboratory findings showed elevated serum amylase (951 IU/L) and lipase (326 IU/L) without positive autoantibodies. Esophagogastroduodenoscopy, enhanced pancreatic CT, and MRCP showed no abnormalities at ampulla of Vater, pancrease, and pancreaticobiliary duct. With the treatment with antibiotics, 5-aminosalicylic acid, steroid, and azathioprine, as a whole, decreasing pattern and intermittent fine coordinated fluctuation of the levels of amylase and lipase along with the decrease of Crohn's disease activity index (CDAI) and the CRP levels were observed. Then, three months after the start of the treatment, normalization of the pancreatic enzymes was observed, and there was recurrent elevation of pancreatic engyme during 12 months maintenance therapy. This report supports the concept of an association between idiopathic pancreatitis and CD, based on a significant and close relation between the levels of serum amylase and lipase, and CDAI.
Adult
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Aminosalicylic Acids/therapeutic use
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Amylases/blood
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Crohn Disease/complications/*diagnosis
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Diagnosis, Differential
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Duodenoscopy
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Humans
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Lipase/blood
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Male
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Pancreatitis/*diagnosis/enzymology/etiology
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Tomography, X-Ray Computed