AI Article Synopsis

  • Acute pancreatitis can occur after cardiac surgery, but traditional tests like amylase aren't effective in infants for diagnosing it.
  • Researchers studied levels of trypsinogen-2 and trypsin-2-alpha1-antitrypsin (AAT) as potential indicators of pancreatic function in 46 patients (21 infants, 25 children) undergoing heart surgery.
  • They found significant increases in trypsinogen-2 and trypsin-2-AAT after surgery, suggesting possible pancreatic disturbances, though most patients showed no clinical signs of pancreatitis.

Article Abstract

Acute pancreatitis is a known complication of cardiac surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass but amylase is not a reliable marker in infants. We evaluated whether the serum concentrations of trypsinogen-2 and trypsin-2-alpha1-antitrypsin (AAT) can be used to study disturbances in pancreatic function in children and infants undergoing cardiac surgery. The study comprised 21 infants < 1 year and 25 children aged 1-16 years undergoing cardiopulmonary bypass at the Children's Hospital, Helsinki University Central Hospital. Consecutive serum samples were taken before surgery, at 12 h, 1, 2 and 3 days after surgery, and before discharge from the hospital. A moderate increase in trypsinogen-2 and trypsin-2-AAT in serum was found in more than two-thirds of the patients. On day 3, there was a 4.3-fold mean increase (CI 95% 2.8-6.5) in trypsinogen-2 and a 2.4-fold mean increase (CI 95% 1.8-3.1) in trypsin-2-AAT. In 4 patients trypsinogen-2 was elevated by more than 20-fold. One patient had clinical pancreatitis, but there were no clinical signs of pancreatitis in the other three patients. The changes in trypsinogen-2 and trypsin-2-AAT were similar in infants and children. The moderate increase in the serum concentrations of trypsinogen-2 and trypsin-2-AAT after cardiac surgery in the absence of signs of pancreatitis may be due to a subclinical pancreatic disturbance, but it could also be caused by an inflammatory response and expression of extrapancreatic trypsin. Contrary to amylase, trypsinogen-2 is expressed in the pancreas of infants.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/003655102753611708DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

cardiac surgery
16
trypsinogen-2 trypsin-2-aat
12
trypsinogen-2
8
trypsinogen-2 trypsin-2-alpha1-antitrypsin
8
infants children
8
cardiopulmonary bypass
8
serum concentrations
8
concentrations trypsinogen-2
8
moderate increase
8
increase 95%
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!