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1.
Pancreas Divisum     
We review important new clinical observations in pancreas divisum (PD) made since 2007. PD is common and has the same prevalence in the general population and idiopathic pancreatitis (IP). Up to 53% of patients with PD and IP have underlying idiopathic chronic pancreatitis (CP), and in rigorous prospective clinical follow-up and/or natural history studies, many with idiopathic recurrent acute pancreatitis (IRAP) have idiopathic CP. According to retrospective studies, PD does not modify the natural course of nonalcoholic or alcoholic CP. CFTR and/or SPINK1 gene mutations associate with IP (idiopathic CP and IRAP) independently of the presence of PD. More than one third of patients with pancreatitis or presumed pancreaticobiliary pain respond to placebo. Authors of uncontrolled studies report a significant symptomatic response to surgery and endotherapy in patients with IP and PD, but the response remains unproven and is largely limited to those with IRAP and not idiopathic CP or chronic pain.  相似文献   

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Endoscopic Treatment in Pancreas Divisum   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Objectives: We have reviewed the results of endo-scopic stunting with and without sphincterotnmy at the minor papilla in 34 patients with pancreas divisum and pain or pancreatitis. Methods: Symptoms before and after the procedure were scored and compared, as was the patient's estimate of the overall effectiveness of the treatment. Results: A statistically significant improvement in pain score was found in patients with acute recurrent pancreatitis and in patients with chronic pancreatitis, but not in a small group of patients suffering pain without pancreatitis. The overall effectiveness was found to be 78%, 60%, and 40%, respectively, for these three groups. Complications of treatment were common, but usually mild. There were no evident differences in outcomes between patients who did or did not undergo sphinctcrotomy of the minor papilla. Conclusions: This study confirms that there is a subgroup of patients with symptomatic pancreas divisum who improve with en-doscopic treatment. Correctly identifying these individuals remains a challenge.  相似文献   

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The mechanism for the onset of chronic alcoholic pancre-atitis(CAP) involves many unresolved questions. We (1,2) have succeeded in creating an animal model of CAPby inducing mild stenosis of the pancreatic duct in experi-mentalanimals given alcohol. The CAP seen in this modelis akin to that seen in humans. This means that pancreaticduct-related factors play an important role in the onset ofCAP.  相似文献   

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Abstract: Between 1972 and 1992, 18, 128 ERCPs were performed. Pancreas divisum (PD) was diagnosed in 184 of these patients (1.02%). The clinical features of 108 cases were investigated (M53, F55, average age 54) who were encountered during the last 8 years. In a morphological study, we examined changes in both the ventral and dorsal ducts. An ERP of the dorsal pancreas demonstrated severe changes (SE) in 2 of 73 patients (3%), moderate changes (MO) in 4 (5%) and minimal changes (MI) in 17 (23%). When the ventral pancreas was examined, SE and MO occurred in one each of the 89 patients (1%), and MI in 5 (6%). The rate of ductal abnormalities in the dorsal pancreas (32%) was significantly higher than the rate in the ventral pancreas (8%). However, the dorsal duct changes did not correlate with alcoholism. The exocrine or endocrine function in the majority of the patients with PD was normal or slightly disturbed. An investigation of abdominal pain revealed that patients who complained of pancreatic-type pain were 33%, and this rate was higher than the rate in the control group without PD (12.8%). In conclusion, it was suggested that PD was related to mild dorsal pancreatitis. (Dig Endosc 1994; 6: 80–86)  相似文献   

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Described is the case of a 24-yr-old patient in whom recurrent attacks of acute pancreatitis following a cholecystectomy were found to be associated with anomaly of the pancreas--the so-called pancreas divisum. An examination by endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography showed typical findings of a short duct of Wirsung. Cannulation of the secondary duct of Santorini revealed a grossly dilated and strictured duct full of stones. After drainage of the duct by a pancreaticojejunostomy (Puestow procedure), the patient has not had any further episodes of acute pancreatitis during a follow-up period of 4 yr.  相似文献   

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We describe a previously unreported complication of pancreas divisum: severe and repeated episodes of gastrointestinal bleeding through the main pancreatic duct (hemosuccus pancreaticus) in a 34-yr-old woman over a period of 10 months. She had negative investigations, including a blank laparotomy, until an endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography revealed a pancreas divisum with chronic pancreatitis and a small pseudocyst at the tail of the dorsal pancreas. During the procedure, bleeding through the papilla minor was observed coming from Santorini's duct. A corporocaudal pancreatectomy was done and the bleeding episodes have subsided.  相似文献   

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Abstract: The morphological characteristics and incidence of pancreas divisum (PD) in Niigata were investigated by studying 16,646 cases diagnosed by ERCP. These cases had been patients in 16 hospitals located in Niigata prefecture. PD was found in 114 (63 cases confirmed, 51 cases unconfirmed) of these 16,646 cases (0.68%). An unconfirmed case was defined as being a patient in whom only the short ventral pancreatic duct was visible through the main papilla, and the confirmed cases were classified into the 3 types according to the ductal systems of the dorsal and ventral pancreas. The classification of these 3 types was as follows. Type 1: Nonfusion between the ventral (VPD) and dorsal pancreatic ducts (DPD), which was visualized through the main papilla (MP) and the accessory papilla (AP), separately. Type 2: Only DPD was visualized through the AP. In spite of the cannulation of the MP, the VPD was not demonstrated. Type 3: Miscellaneous cases. The frequency of Type 1, Type 2, and Type 3 was 58.7% (37 cases), 28.6% (18 cases), and 12.7% (8 cases), respectively. Type 3 consisted of two subtypes. One (7 cases) was regarded as being when the patient had a very fine communicating branch between VPD and DPD, whether an obvious communicating branch could be detected or not by ERCP. The other subtype (only one case) showed very strange findings in which through the AP a short pancreatic duct distributed to the head of the pancreas and to the uncinate process was visualized and in which through the MP a long pancreatic duct to the tail was demonstrated, separately.  相似文献   

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Pancreas Divisum: Incidence, Detection, and Clinical Significance   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Pancreas divisum is a congenital anomaly in which the ventral and dorsal pancreas drain separately into the duodenum. It is the most common congenital variant of pancreatic ductal fusion and drainage anomalies. With widespread use of endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography, pancreas divisum is being detected with increasing frequency. Ten cases of pancreas divisum detected among 500 endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography examinations performed between 1979 and 1985 at our institution were critically analyzed. Patients with symptomatic pancreas divisum (group 1) were typically young (mean age 29 yr), usually female, and had no history of significant alcohol abuse. Those with incidental detection of pancreas divisum (group 2) were older (mean age 62 yr), usually male with hepatobiliary disease, and had a history of significant alcohol ingestion. The radiological feature of pancreas divisum is characterized by a short (1-6 cm) and thin (2 mm diameter) pancreatic duct (duct of Wirsung) that branches off into regular arborization and drains only the posterior part of the head of the pancreas. This appearance is quite typical; however, this may be simulated by other conditions such as previous pancreatic trauma, partial pancreatectomy, or pancreatitis with irreversible damage to the duct, pseudocyst, and pancreatic carcinoma. The differentiation between true and false pancreas divisum is important because of its clinical implications.  相似文献   

12.
Pancreas divisum is a pancreatic duct anomaly that occurs due to failure of fusion of the dorsal and ventral ducts. While recognition of this anomaly is increasing due to more aggressive endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography, its significance remains unclear. A patient with chronic pancreatitis and a history of alcohol abuse was noted to have pancreas divisum. At surgical exploration, intraoperative pancreatography revealed an obstructing pseudocyst of the duct of Santorini. Extended sphincteroplasty and cystduodenostomy as well as Roux-en-Y pancreatojejunostomy were necessary to insure adequate accessory duct drainage. Surgical therapy of pancreas divisum in chronic pancreatitis should be designed to correct existing pancreatic duct obstruction.  相似文献   

13.
Abstract: Five cases of pancreas divisum, clinically diagnosed by endoscopic retrograde choledochopancreatography (ERCP), were studied histopathologically. They consisted of four biopsied cases and one patient who underwent pancreatoduodenectomy under the diagnosis of a suspected pancreatic carcinoma. Fibrosis was found in three out of the five cases, two cases with fibrosis in the dorsal pancreas and one in the ventral pancreas. In the two dorsal fibrosis pancreas cases, fibrosis was distributed in the intra- and interlobular areas and was accompanied by atrophy or disappearance of the acinar cells. These findings were compatible with chronic obstructive pancreatitis, distal to a stricture of the pancreatic duct. In the one ventral fibrosis pancreas case, i. e., the pancreatoduodenectomized case, fibrosis was distributed mainly in the interlobular area associated with hemosiderin deposition. Hemosiderin deposition was also observed in inflammatory foci at the posterior aspect of the ventral pancreas. Hence, such interlobular fibrosis developed in relation to the inflammatory foci, and was not caused by pancreas divisum. Therefore, in pancreas divisum, abnormal findings were observed in the dorsal pancreas tissue, and they were compatible with chronic obstructive pancreatitis. (Dig Endosc 1994; 6 : 74–79)  相似文献   

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Background  

Patients with pancreas divisum may develop pancreatitis. Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) is the gold standard for diagnosing pancreas divisum. Magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography (MRCP) is a non-invasive test reported to be highly accurate in diagnosing pancreas divisum.  相似文献   

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