Pancreas

Home Current Issue Previous Issues Published Ahead-of-Print For Authors Journal Info
Skip Navigation LinksHome > May 2004 - Volume 28 - Issue 4 > Exocrine Pancreatic Function After Alcoholic or Biliary Acut...
Text sizing:
A
A
A
Pancreas:
May 2004 - Volume 28 - Issue 4 - pp 359-363
Original Article

Exocrine Pancreatic Function After Alcoholic or Biliary Acute Pancreatitis

Migliori, Marina MD; Pezzilli, Raffaele MD; Tomassetti, Paola MD; Gullo, Lucio MD

Collapse Box

Abstract

Objectives: There have been various studies of exocrine pancreatic function after acute pancreatitis, but few have examined the relationship between this function and the etiology of the pancreatitis. The aim of this work was to study pancreatic function in patients who had had acute alcoholic or acute biliary pancreatitis.

Methods: Seventy-five patients who had had a single attack of acute pancreatitis were studied. The etiology was alcohol in 36 and cholelithiasis in 39. Pancreatic function was studied between 4 and 18 months after pancreatitis by duodenal intubation in 18 patients (8 alcohol, 10 lithiasis) and by the amino acid consumption test (AACT) in the remaining 57 (28 alcohol, 29 lithiasis). For those who underwent AACT, the test was repeated 1 year after the first examination.

Results: Among the 36 patients with alcoholic pancreatitis, most had impaired pancreatic function at both duodenal intubation (8/8, 100%) and at AACT (22/28, 78.6%); at the second test, the AACT remained pathological (18/23, 82.1%). Of the 39 patients with biliary pancreatitis, only 4 of the 10 (40%) who underwent duodenal intubation and only 5 of the 29 (17.2%) who performed AACT had pancreatic insufficiency; at the second test, only 4 of the 26 (15.4%) who repeated the AACT were pathological. The differences in the frequency and degree of pancreatic insufficiency between patients with alcoholic and those with biliary pancreatitis were statistically significant.

Conclusions: The results show that after alcoholic acute pancreatitis, the pancreatic insufficiency was significantly more frequent and more severe than after biliary pancreatitis. These findings together with the fact that the insufficiency was also more persistent suggest that acute alcoholic pancreatitis may occur in a pancreas that already has chronic lesions.

© 2004 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Inc.

You currently do not have access to this article.

You may need to:

Note: If your society membership provides for full-access to this article, you may need to login on your society’s web site first.

Article Tools

You currently do not have access to this article.

You may need to:

Note: If your society membership provides for full-access to this article, you may need to login on your society’s web site first.

Search for Similar Articles
You may search for similar articles that contain these same keywords or you may modify the keyword list to augment your search.