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ACUTE PANCREATITIS

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ACUTE PANCREATITIS Tim Pieh, MD Maine-Dartmouth Family Practice Residency OUTLINE Diagnosis Etiology Assessing severity Treatment Complications CASE 64 yo woman ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ACUTE PANCREATITIS


1
ACUTE PANCREATITIS
  • Tim Pieh, MD
  • Maine-Dartmouth Family Practice Residency

2
OUTLINE
  • Diagnosis
  • Etiology
  • Assessing severity
  • Treatment
  • Complications

3
CASE
  • 64 yo woman develops upper abd pain late last
    night. Band-like with radiation to back.
    Initially not severe, but awoke and had several
    episodes of non-bloody emesis. No F/C, no dark
    urine
  • The first 8 hours in ED/Hospital needs 36 mg MSO4
    to control pain.

4
CASE
  • PMHx HTN, Hyperlipidemia
  • PSurgHx TAH-BSO
  • MEDS Estrace, Plendil
  • SOCIAL no tobacco or ETOH
  • BP 94/45 ? 160/90, HR 76, T 97.9,
  • GEN awake alert
  • HEENT no icterus, mouth is dry
  • CARDIO RRR
  • ABD SNT, no rebound, no bruising

5
CASE
  • ABD CT marked peripancreatic fluid, streaking
    around pancreas, normal enhancement, no clear
    gallstones, CBD not dilated
  • LABS
  • AST/ALT both slightly elevated.
  • T.bili normal
  • Amylase 2620
  • lipase 26,625
  • Hct normal
  • WBC 14.8

6
MORTALITY
  • Mild Acute Pancreatitis
  • lt 5
  • Severe Acute Pancreatitis
  • 25
  • Nearly 20 of all pts with AP develop SAP
  • 25 of SAP pts die

7
DISEASE COURSE
  • Deaths occur in 2 phases
  • PHASE 1 (with in first few days)
  • SIRS
  • ARDS
  • PHASE 2 (after second week)
  • Sterile necrosis
  • Infected necrosis
  • Multiple organ dysfunction

8
DIAGNOSIS
  • FAIRLY SUDDEN ONSET UPPER ABD PAIN
  • RADIATION TO BACK
  • N/V
  • ELEVATED AMYLASE
  • ELEVATED LIPASE
  • CULLEN SIGN (PERIUMBILICAL BRUISING)
  • GREY-TURNER SIGN (FLANK BRUISING)

9
CAUSES
  • The Big Three
  • Gall Stones (40)
  • Alcohol (35)
  • Idiopathic (20)

10
CAUSES
  • The Others
  • Trauma (pancreatic duct injury)
  • Post-ERCP
  • Drugs (rare)
  • 30 meds identified
  • Azathioprine (Imuran immune suppressant)
  • Valproic acid (Depakote seizures/mood
    stabilizer)
  • Didanosine (Videx HIV med)
  • Pentamidine (HIV pneumocystis carinii Tx)
  • Mesalamine (Asacol ulcerative colitis Tx)

11
CAUSES
  • Organ transplant, major surgery
  • Hypertryglycerides (rare)
  • Greater than 1000 mg/dL
  • Pregnancy
  • Third trimester until 6 weeks post partum
  • HIV
  • 35 to 800 times greater risk of AP c/w general
    pop.
  • Hypercalcemia
  • Most often secondary to hyperparathyroidism
  • Scorpion, spider, and Gila Monster lizard bites

12
PREDICTING CAUSES
  • Gallstones
  • ALT gt 150 IU/dL ? PPV gt95
  • Ultrasound will see gallstones in 60-80 of cases
  • (Less reliable for stones in CBD)
  • MRCP sensitivity 90-100
  • ETOH
  • Lipase gt amylase

13
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14
SEVERITY
  • Early identification of severity and appropriate
    ICU care has significantly reduced mortality over
    the last 20 yrs
  • Bedside eval (compared to severity scoring)
    missed over 50 of severe cases

15
SEVERITY
  • When do you do early transfer to ICU?
  • When do you consult critical care team?
  • When do you start antibiotics?
  • When do you get a CT scan?
  • They say people crash fast who are these
    people?
  • What is aggressive fluid resuscitation?

16
SEVERITY
  • APACHE II
  • Best test
  • Can be done at 24 hrs, can be repeated
  • Ransons Criteria (1974!)
  • Needs to be done at 24 and 48 hrs
  • Balthazars (CT scan criteria)
  • Glascow
  • Single Markers of Severity

17
APACHE II
  • http//www.sfar.org/scores2/apache22.html
  • 8 is severe

18
Ransons Criteria 3 is severe
19
SINGLE MARKERS
20
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21
CASE
  • At 36 hrs you are night float and get a call from
    RN. Pt with increased work at breathing,
    crackles at bases of lungs. She is 4 liters
    ahead on fluids.
  • What do you want to do?

22
TREATMENT
  • Vigorous intravenous hydration alone is the best
    available option in the prevention of pancreatic
    necrosis.
  • Pitchhumoni et al. Mortality in Acute
    Pancreatitis, Journal of Clinical
    Gastroenterology

23
TREATMENT
  • AGGRESSIVE FLUID RESUSCITATION
  • May require 250-500 cc/hr for first 48 hrs
  • 6 L of fluid is sequestered in abdomen alone
  • Third spacing can consume up to 1/3 of total
    plasma volume
  • 1/3 of people die in the first phase ? 50 of
    these are associated to ARDS
  • PULMONARY EDEMA ? CHF

24
TREATMENT
  • INFLAMMATORY MEDIATORS PANCREATIC SECRETIONS
    ARE WASHING THROUGH THE LUNGS
  • INCREASED PULM. VASCULAR PERMEABILITY ? PULMONARY
    EDEMA

25
TREATMENT
  • How do you know you are resuscitated?
  • Blood pressure
  • Heart rate
  • Urine output
  • SPO2/ABGs show good oxygenation and no acidemia

26
TREATMENT
  • AGGRESSIVE FLUID RESSUCITATION
  • You may create electrolyte imbalances that need
    to be corrected
  • You may need CVP monitoring (central line)
  • CXRs help (CHF vs ARDS)
  • ABGs help (still hypoxic ? need more fluids?)
  • 23 of SAP pts get ARF ? 80 mortality
  • 0.5 cc/kg/hr urine output is goal (need a Foley)

27
TREATMENT
  • OXYGENATE
  • Give O2 (spO295)
  • Liberal intubation/ventilation to treat ARDS
  • SCDs

28
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29
NECROSIS
  • Starts to occur within 4 days of disease
  • CT with po IV contrast is gold standard
  • Necrotic areas do not enhance
  • You will NOT see it on CT before 48hrs
  • Once you Dx necrosis mortality jumps
  • 40-60 get secondary infection
  • Mortality then approaches 80

30
SECONDARY INFECTIONS
  • SYMPTOMS
  • N/V, epigastric pain, distension, fever, elevated
    WBC
  • Diagnosis of sterile vs infected necrosis
  • CT-guided needle aspiration
  • This is the most devastating complication and
    marks the second peak in mortality (_at_ 2 weeks)

31
SECONDARY INFECTIONS
  • FLUID COLLECTIONS
  • PSEUDOCYSTS
  • PANCREATIC NECROSIS
  • Above get infected in 1-10 of all acute
    pancreatitis, but are source of 80 of deaths

32
SECONDARY INFECTIONS
  • What bugs?
  • Gram (-) bacteria cross from gut
  • E. coli (35)
  • Klebsiella (24)
  • Enterococcus (24)
  • Staph (14)
  • Pseudomonas, proteus, strep, enterobacter,
    bacteroides, anaerobes

33
SECONDARY INFECTIONS
  • Pathogens colonize gut
  • Intestinal mucosal barrier breaks down
  • Bacteria crosses through

34
ANTIOBIOTICS
  • Controversial
  • They DO decrease incidence of infection in
    necrosis, but do NOT decrease mortality
  • Gotta cover multiple bugs
  • Gotta get into pancreas
  • If you see necrosis ? start antibiotics (?)

35
ANTIOBIOTICS
  • Imipenem
  • Cipro metronidazole
  • One study showed 24 of pts had fungus
  • Very poor prognosis

36
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37
NUTRITION
  • Normal pancreas secretes up to 2 liters/day of
    secretions
  • Pancreatic stimulation during AP releases
    proteolytic enzymes ? autodigestion
  • Oral feeding increases release of secretin and
    cholecystokinin ? stim pancreas
  • rest the pancreas ? NPO

38
NUTRITION
  • TRADITION
  • Rest the pancreas ? NPO
  • TPN only after 5-7 days (prevent starvation)
  • Ill pts cant be fed (ileus, aspiration)

39
NUTRITION
  • ENTERAL vs TPN Feedings
  • If distal to Ligament of Treitz (nasojejunal tube
    or J-tube) pancreatic secretion basal rate
  • Both started after 48 hours
  • Easier to restart po feedings
  • Average length of nutritional support shorter
  • 7 vs 11 days
  • Fewer septic complications
  • 23/day vs 222/day

40
NUTRITION
  • NEW THOUGHTS
  • Meta-analysis of 15 randomized studies
  • Compared early vs delayed ENTERAL feedings in
    753 critically ill pts
  • Early was 36 hrs!
  • Improved
  • Wound healing
  • Host immune function
  • Preservation of intestinal mucosal integrity
  • Decreased infections
  • BUT, no decreased mortality

41
NUTRITION
  • Feed to maintain gut integrity
  • Protects against transfer of bacteria

42
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43
ERCP
  • If there is a stone or cholangitis (biliary
    sepsis) or persistent jaundice
  • Need urgent ERCP with sphincterotomy and stone
    extraction
  • Otherwise, ERCP not indicated

44
SURGERY
  • Used to be very liberal with early surgery
  • Trauma
  • If duct damaged
  • Gallstone etiology and mild
  • Cholecystectomy in same admission
  • If no chole ? 25-69 recurrence rate of
    pancreatitis within 6-18 wks
  • Sterile necrosis ? controversial
  • Infected necrosis ? yes, but delay

45
CASE REVISITED
  • By 48 hours pts abd pain is worsening
  • HR is 140, afebrile, BP normal
  • Abd shows very subtle guarding
  • WBC 27.6
  • Ca 6.6
  • PO2 61
  • Base deficit 8
  • BUN rise 9
  • LDH 976
  • RANSON SCORE 3
  • APACHE II SCORE 8

46
CASE REVISITED
  • Pt transferred to ICU
  • Central line
  • Arterial line
  • Repeat Abd CT new bilateral pleural effusions,
    pancreas enhances in tail only.
  • Transferred to Maine Medical Center.
  • Pt died 5 weeks after admission.

47
SUMMARY
  • They may look good, but
  • Score severity early
  • Use lots of IVF
  • Go to ICU early
  • Early enteral feedings work better

48
REFERENCES
  • Swaroop VS. Severe Acute Pancreatitis. JAMA.2004
    291 2865-2868.
  • Pitchumoni CS. Factors influencing mortality in
    acute pancreatitis. Can we alter them? J Clin
    Gastroenerol. 2005 39 798-814
  • Mitchell RMS. Pancreatitis. Lancet. 2003 361
    1447-1445
  • Nathens AB. Management of the critically ill
    patient with severe acute pancreatitis. Crit Care
    Med. 2004 32 2524-2536.
  • Bentrem DJ. Pancreas healing response in
    critical illness. Crit Care Med. 2003 31
    S582-S589
  • Bank S. Evaluation of factors that have reduced
    mortality from acute pancreatitis over the past
    20 years. J Clin Gastroenterol. 2002 35 50-60
  • Werner J. Management of acute pancreatitis from
    surgery to conventional intensive care. Gut.
    2003 54 426-436.
  • Pastor CM. Pancreatitis-associated acute lung
    injury new insights. Chest. 2003 124
    2341-2351.
  • Yousef M. Management of severe acute
    pancreatitis. British Journal of Surgery. 2003
    90 407-420
  • Chari ST. Clinical manesfestations and diagnosis
    of acute pancreatitis. UpToDate. 2005.
  • Chari ST. Etiology of acute pancreatitis.
    UpToDate. 2005.
  • Chari ST. Predicting the severity of acute
    pancreatitis. UpToDate. 2005.
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