Alcoholic liver disease in alcoholic chronic pancreatitis: a prospective study.

Ital J Gastroenterol

Istituto di Clinica Medica e Gastroenterologia, Università di Bologna, Ospedale S. Orsola, Italy.

Published: March 1995

The prevalence and characteristics of alcoholic liver disease (ALD) in patients with alcohol-induced chronic pancreatitis (AICP) are not well defined. Fifty consecutive patients undergoing surgery for AICP were investigated for evidence of ALD. In addition to preoperative functional and imaging assessment of the liver, all had liver biopsy during surgery. Hepatic biopsy results were as follows: 12 patients had normal liver and 10 minimal aspecific changes; of the remaining 28 patients, 7 had liver cirrhosis, 11 showed features of alcoholic hepatitis, 2 had moderate steatosis, 6 extrahepatic cholestasis, and the remaining 2 had a combination of alcoholic hepatitis and cholestasis. Of the 7 patients with cirrhosis, 3 had oesophageal varices and 2 of these developed ascites in the postoperative period; in the remaining patients with ALD, this disease was subclinical. Patients with ALD consumed significantly (p < 0.005) more alcohol than those without ALD. In patients with cirrhosis, the duration of alcohol consumption (mean 27.6 years, range 18-42 years) was significantly longer (p < 0.05) than in patients without ALD (mean 19.7 years, range 8-36 years). The association of ALD with AICP is much more common than previously believed. The fact that AICP occurs earlier than liver cirrhosis and the fact that many patients stop alcohol consumption after the first attacks of pancreatic pain may explain, at least in part, the apparent rarity with which this association has been indicated by previous studies.

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