Background: ERAS is an evidence-based multimodal perioperative protocol focused on stress reduction and promoting a return to function. The aim of this work is to perform a cost-consequence analysis for the implementation of ERAS in major lung resection by means of minimally invasive surgery (VATS) from the public health service perspective, evaluating resource consumption and clinical outcomes with respect to a control group of past patients, which did not adopt an ERAS protocol.
Methods: Outcome differences (re-intervention rates, major and minor intraoperative and postoperative complications, readmissions, and mortality) as well as the costs of preoperative, operative, and postoperative care were estimated.
Objective: Cigarette smoking is associated with a higher risk of developing chronic pancreatitis (CP) and increases the likelihood of developing pancreatic calcifications. The aim of this study was to know whether smoking cessation modifies the course of the disease.
Methods: Patients with CP who had been followed up for more than 6 years from clinical onset and who had not developed calcifications after 5 years were analyzed.
Background: Intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasms (IPMNs) may present with clinical and radiological pictures resembling those of chronic pancreatitis (CP).
Aims: To compare the clinical and epidemiological characteristics of patients suffering from CP with those of patients suffering from IPMN. To assess whether CP is associated with an increased risk of developing IPMN.
Background: In the light of the recent hypothesis that one cause of pancreatic damage may be related to the toxic action of oxygen free radicals [Braganza JM. The pathogenesis of pancreatitis. Manchester: Manchester University Press; 1991; Braganza JM.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Controversial findings about the relationships between obesity and gastro-esophageal reflux have been reported, as well as about the effects of weight loss and bariatric surgery on reflux. The aims of this study were to evaluate esophageal motility and gastro-esophageal acid circadian patterns in obese patients and to test the effects of vertical banded gastroplasty (VBG) on these parameters.
Methods: 14 obese subjects (BMI 36-53 kg/m2), 4 men, 10 women, 27-61 years old, admitted for elective bariatric surgery, underwent clinical evaluation, upper endoscopy, esophageal manometry and gastroesophageal pH monitoring.
The role of cigarette smoking and diabetes mellitus as risk factors for exocrine pancreatic cancer (PC) was investigated in a hospital based case-control study. Current smokers were at increased risk for PC (OR = 2.36, 95% CI 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Keratin 8 (K8) and 18 (K18) are the major components of the intermediate filament cytoskeleton of pancreatic acinar cells and play a relevant role in pancreatic exocrine homeostasis. Transgenic mice for K8 have shown to display progressive exocrine pancreas alterations, including dysplasia, loss of acinar architecture, redifferentiation of acinar to ductal cells, inflammation, fibrosis, and substitution of exocrine tissue by adipose tissue.
Aim: To investigate whether mutations in the keratin 8 gene are associated with chronic pancreatitis.
Background: An increased incidence of CFTR mutations has recently been reported in chronic and idiopathic pancreatitis.
Aim: The aim of the study was to verify these data and describe the clinical, morphological and histological findings in 99 patients (59 males, 40 females, mean age 40+/-16 years), 45 suffering from idiopathic chronic pancreatitis and 54 from acute recurrent pancreatitis.
Methods: Each subject was screened for the 18 CFTR mutations: DF508, DI507, R1162X, 2183AA>G, 21303K, 3849+10KbC>T, G542X, 1717-1G>A, R553X, Q552X, G85E, 711+5G>A, 3132delTG, 2789+5G>A, W1282X, R117H, R347P, R352Q), which cover 72% of cystic fibrosis chromosomes in the Italian population, plus the 5-thymidine allele in intron 8 of the CFTR gene (IVS85T).
Introduction: Chronic pancreatitis (CP) is characterized by irreversible morphologic and functional alterations of the pancreas, clinically presenting with upper abdominal pain as well as exocrine and endocrine insufficiencies. According to a more recent hypothesis, the pathogenesis may involve genetic and immunologic factors.
Aim: To investigate the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) genes as a genetic background of chronic pancreatitis.
Background/aims: The CFTR gene has been shown to be involved in sporadic idiopathic pancreatitis (IP) and neonatal hypertrypsinemia with normal sweat chloride test (NHNST). The cationic trypsinogen gene (Try4) is responsible for hereditary pancreatitis. The aim of the present study was to find a correlation between mutations in the two genes and the two phenotypes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground And Aim: Elevated levels of secretory immunoglobulin A have been reported in patients with cholestatic hepatitis. Secretory immunoglobulin A is present in the biliary and pancreatic tract. Chronic pancreatitis is a disease characterized by dilatation of Wirsung's duct.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Clin Gastroenterol
December 2000
The differential diagnosis between acute and chronic alcohol-associated pancreatitis is often difficult or impossible at onset of the disease. A study was conducted to determine possible relationships between patients suffering from a first episode of acute alcoholic pancreatitis and patients with unequivocal chronic alcoholic pancreatitis, comparing age, drinking and smoking habits, and body mass index (BMI). Two groups of men were considered.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn immune-mediated reaction to pancreatic structures has been postulated for the pathogenesis of chronic pancreatitis (CP). Several reports demonstrate the presence of antibodies to the pancreatic ductal epithelium in some patients suffering from CP. Serum antibodies to carbonic anhydrase I (anti-CA I) and II (anti-CA II) are present in patients affected by idiopathic CP.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAim: To assess whether patients with misdiagnoses of chronic pancreatitis (CP), followed at an early stage by a diagnosis of pancreatic cancer (PCr), present different epidemiological characteristics from patients suffering either from CP alone or from CP with late degeneration to PCr.
Methods: We arbitrarily subdivided our patient series into three groups: (1) 12 CP who developed PCr within 4 years after onset of symptoms; (2) 12 CP developing PCr after the 4th year, and (3) 701 CP with no subsequent development of PCr. The variables studied were age, sex, drinking and smoking habits, tumor localization, and presence of intraductal calcifications and diabetes mellitus at the time of diagnosis of CP.
The aim of this study was to compare alcohol and smoking as risk factors in the development of chronic pancreatitis and pancreatic cancer. We considered only male subjects: (1) 630 patients with chronic pancreatitis who developed 12 pancreatic and 47 extrapancreatic cancers; (2) 69 patients with histologically well documented pancreatic cancer and no clinical history of chronic pancreatitis; and (3) 700 random controls taken from the Verona polling list and submitted to a complete medical check-up. Chronic pancreatitis subjects drink more than control subjects and more than subjects with pancreatic cancer without chronic pancreatitis (P<0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe salivary glands are structurally similar to the exocrine pancreas and may be involved in the course of diseases of autoimmune origin (sclerosing cholangitis, ulcerative rectocolitis, primary biliary cirrhosis). For a not-yet-quantified proportion of chronic pancreatitis (CP) cases, a possible autoimmune pathogenesis has been postulated. The aim of the study was to assess the frequency of salivary ductal system abnormalities in patients with CP.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: Chronic pancreatitis patients appear to present an increased incidence of pancreatic cancer. The aim of the study was to compare the incidence of cancer, whether pancreatic or extrapancreatic, in our chronic pancreatitis cases with that in the population of our region.
Methods: We analyzed 715 cases of chronic pancreatitis with a median follow-up of 10 yr (7287 person-years); during this observation period they developed 61 neoplasms, 14 of which were pancreatic cancers.
Manometry is considered the gold standard for evaluating sphincter of Oddi dysfunction. It has recently been demonstrated that the ultrasound (US) secretin test proposed a few years ago as a noninvasive test for the study of sphincter of Oddi dysfunction yields a substantial percentage of pathological findings in patients with acute recurrent pancreatitis. The aim of this study was to compare the results of the US secretin test with sphincter of Oddi manometry findings in a consecutive series of patients with recurrent acute pancreatitis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFScand J Gastroenterol
August 1998
Background: We investigated the epidemiologic, clinical, and radiologic aspects of a mixed medicosurgical series of chronic pancreatitis patients observed at the University of Verona Centre for the Study of Pancreatic Diseases over the period 1971-1995.
Methods: Even though the pathogenesis of chronic pancreatitis has yet to be clarified and the classification is still debatable, the patients were subdivided in accordance with the Marseilles-Rome classification into those with alcoholic, obstructive, familial, and idiopathic forms of the disease. A total of 715 patients were analysed with a median follow-up period of 10 years (range, 1-25 years).
Mol Cell Biochem
August 1998
Lithostathine may play a physiological role in preventing the precipitation of excess calcium in the pancreatic juice. The hypothesis has been advanced that in chronic calcifying pancreatitis the abnormal biosynthesis of lithostathine might be the original defect to which genetic proneness to the disease may be ascribed. The aim of the present work was to study lithostathine messenger RNA expression in the pancreas of patients with different types of pancreatitis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe intravenous administration of octreotide stimulates sphincter of Oddi activity and impairs pancreatic flow into the duodenum. Postsecretin ultrasonography (US-S test) has revealed an increase in the caliber of the main pancreatic duct, which disappears in healthy persons approximately 10 minutes later as a result of the opening of the sphincter of Oddi and passage of stimulated fluids into the duodenum. We have assessed US-S test patterns after octreotide in healthy persons and in patients with recurrent acute pancreatitis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Clin Nutr
March 1997
The food intake of 40 male patients with chronic pancreatitis followed up at our center for > or = 10 y were compared with that of 75 healthy control subjects. Patients had significantly lower anthropometric values and serum triacylglycerol and cholesterol concentrations than control subjects (P < 0.001).
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