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Journal ArticleDOI

Acute pancreatitis: value of CT in establishing prognosis.

Emil J. Balthazar, +3 more
- 01 Feb 1990 - 
- Vol. 174, Iss: 2, pp 331-336
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TLDR
A CT severity index, based on a combination of peripancreatic inflammation, phlegmon, and degree of pancreatic necrosis as seen at initial CT study, was developed and showed clear trends in patients who initially had or developed more than 30% necrosis.
Abstract
The presence and degree of pancreatic necrosis (30%, 50%, or greater than 50%) was evaluated by means of bolus injection of contrast material and dynamic sequential computed tomography (CT) in 88 patients with acute pancreatitis at initial and follow-up examinations. Pancreatic necrosis was defined as lack of enhancement of all or a portion of the gland. Length of hospitalization, morbidity, and mortality in patients with early or late necrosis (22 patients) were evaluated and compared with the same criteria in the rest of the group. Patients with necrosis had a 23% mortality and an 82% complication rate; patients without necrosis had 0% mortality and 6% morbidity. When only the initial assessment was considered, patients with peripancreatic phlegmons and necrosis had 80% morbidity, compared with 36% morbidity in those with phlegmons and no necrosis. Serious complications occurred in patients who initially had or developed more than 30% necrosis. A CT severity index, based on a combination of peripancreatic inflammation, phlegmon, and degree of pancreatic necrosis as seen at initial CT study, was developed. Patients with a high CT severity index had 92% morbidity and 17% mortality; patients with a low CT severity index had 2% morbidity, and none died.

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Causes, clinical findings and therapeutic options in chylomicronemia syndrome, a special form of hypertriglyceridemia

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors highlight the recent findings about the clinical and laboratory features, differential diagnosis, as well as the epidemiology of the monogenic and polygenic forms of chylomicronemias, emphasizing the newest therapeutic approaches, as novel agents may offer solution for the effective treatment of these conditions.
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Utilizing Multiparameter Scores and Procalcitonin as Prognosis Markers for the Degree of Severity of Acute Pancreatitis.

TL;DR: This study achieved an early identification of the severe form of acute pancreatitis, by using the multiparameter tests and the biologic marker procalcitonin, allowing for the appropriate therapy to be implemented and thus decreasing the complication rate of this pathological entity.
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Early differential diagnosis of the severity of acute pancreatitis.

TL;DR: The basal amplitudes of skin temperature oscillations in patients with AP were much lower than in healthy volunteers and progressively decreased as the disease severity increased, and the dysregulation of vascular tone during the contralateral cold test was observed in all patients withAP.
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Plasma thrombin-activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor as an indicator of inflammation and disease severity in acute pancreatitis.

TL;DR: The present study for the first time demonstrated that TAFI is elevated in AP, and its association with disease severity was significantly correlated with TAFi levels.
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