Acute pancreatitis
Acute pancreatitis is a sudden inflammation of the pancreas. Causes include a gallstone impacted in the common bile duct or the pancreatic duct, heavy alcohol use, systemic disease, trauma, elevated calcium levels, hypertriglyceridemia, certain medications, hereditary causes and, in children, mumps. Acute pancreatitis may be a single event, it may be recurrent, or it may progress to chronic pancreatitis and/or pancreatic failure.
In all cases of acute pancreatitis, early intravenous fluid hydration and early enteral feeding are associated with lower mortality and complications. Mild cases are usually successfully treated with conservative measures such as hospitalization with intravenous fluid infusion, pain control, and early enteral feeding. If a person is not able to tolerate feeding by mouth, feeding via nasogastric or nasojejunal tubes are frequently used which provide nutrition directly to the stomach or intestines respectively. Severe cases often require admission to an intensive care unit. Severe pancreatitis, which by definition includes organ damage other than the pancreas, has a mortality rate of 20%. The condition is characterized by the pancreas secreting active enzymes such as trypsin, chymotrypsin and carboxypeptidase, instead of their inactive forms, leading to auto-digestion of the pancreas. Calcium helps to convert trypsinogen to the active trypsin, thus elevated calcium is a potential cause of pancreatitis. Damage to the pancreatic ducts can occur as a result of this. Long term complications include type 3c diabetes, in which the pancreas is unable to secrete enough insulin due to structural damage. 35% develop exocrine pancreatic insufficiency in which the pancreas is unable to secrete digestive enzymes due to structural damage, leading to malabsorption.
Signs and symptoms
Common
Common symptoms of acute pancreatitis include abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, and low to moderate grade fever. The abdominal pain is the most common symptom and it is usually described as being in the left upper quadrant, epigastric area or around the umbilicus, with radiation throughout the abdomen, or to the chest or back. The abdominal pain initially may worsen with eating or drinking but may become constant as the disease progresses. Less common symptoms include hiccups, abdominal bloating and indigestion. Although these are common symptoms, frequently they are not all present; and epigastric pain may be the only symptom.Grey-Turner's sign or Cullen's sign are associated with severe disease. However both signs are rare and are not specific nor sensitive for diagnosis of acute pancreatitis. Pleural effusions may occur in up to 34% of people with acute pancreatitis and are associated with a poor prognosis. The Mayo-Robson's sign (pain while pressing at the top of the angle lateral to the erector spinae muscles and below the left 12th rib is also associated with acute pancreatitis.
Complications
Complications of acute pancreatitis may occur. Necrotic pancreatitis occurs when inflammation of the pancreas progresses to cell death. Acute fluid collections may form adjacent to the pancreas or necrotic collections may also form adjacent to or within the pancreas. These may progress to pancreatic pseudocysts and walled off areas of dead tissue which may persist for longer than 4 weeks. Both can become secondarily infected. Other complications include gastric outlet obstruction splenic artery pseudoaneurysms, hemorrhage from erosions into splenic artery and vein, blood clot of the splenic vein, superior mesenteric vein and portal veins, duodenal obstruction, common bile duct obstruction, progression to chronic pancreatitis, pancreatic ascites, or pleural effusion.Systemic complications include acute respiratory distress syndrome, multiple organ dysfunction syndrome, disseminated intravascular coagulation, hypocalcemia, hyperglycemia and insulin dependent diabetes mellitus, and malabsorption due to exocrine failure.
Tobacco use, recurrent episodes of acute pancreatitis, pancreatic tissue death, alcoholic pancreatitis are all risk factors for developing chronic pancreatitis.
Causes
Most common
- Biliary pancreatitis due to gallstones or constriction of ampulla of Vater in 40% of cases
- Alcohol in 30% of cases
- Idiopathic in 15–25% of cases
- Metabolic disorders: hereditary pancreatitis, hypercalcemia, elevated triglycerides, malnutrition
- May occur after instrumentation of the pancreatic duct or its opening to the duodenum in procedures such as an endoscopic ultrasound or endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography. The risk after EUS is less than 1% and the risk after ERCP is 5-10%.
- Abdominal trauma
- Penetrating ulcers
- Carcinoma of the head of pancreas, and other cancer
- Drugs: acetaminophen with or without codeine, amiodarone, azathioprine, carbamazepine, cimetidine, cisplatin, clomiphene, enalapril, estrogen containing products or hormones, furosemide, isoniazid, metronidazole, methyldopa, pravastatin, valproic acid
- Infections: mumps, viral hepatitis, coxsackie B virus, cytomegalovirus, Mycoplasma pneumoniae, Ascaris
- Structural abnormalities: pancreas divisum, pancreatic masses or cysts that block the ducts.
- Radiotherapy
- Autoimmune pancreatitis
- Severe hypertriglyceridemia
Less common
- Scorpion venom
- Chinese liver fluke
- Ischemia from bypass surgery
- Heart valve surgery
- Fat necrosis
- Pregnancy
- Infections other than mumps, including varicella zoster
- Hyperparathyroidism
- Cystic fibrosis
- Anorexia or bulimia
Pathology
Pathogenesis
Acute pancreatitis occurs when there is abnormal activation of digestive enzymes within the pancreas. This occurs through inappropriate activation of inactive enzyme precursors called zymogens inside the pancreas, most notably trypsinogen. Normally, trypsinogen is converted to its active form in the first part of the small intestine, where the enzyme assists in the digestion of proteins. During an episode of acute pancreatitis, trypsinogen comes into contact with lysosomal enzymes, which activate trypsinogen to trypsin. The active form trypsin then leads to further activation of other molecules of trypsinogen. The activation of these digestive enzymes lead to inflammation, edema, vascular injury, and even cellular death. The death of pancreatic cells occurs via two main mechanisms: apoptosis, which is physiologically controlled, and necrosis, which is less organized and more damaging. The balance between these two mechanisms of cellular death is mediated by caspases which regulate apoptosis and have important anti-necrosis functions during pancreatitis: preventing trypsinogen activation, preventing ATP depletion through inhibiting polyADP-ribose polymerase, and by inhibiting the inhibitors of apoptosis. If, however, the caspases are depleted due to either chronic ethanol exposure or through a severe insult then necrosis can predominate.Pathophysiology
The two types of acute pancreatitis are mild and severe, which are defined based on whether the predominant response to cell injury is inflammation or necrosis. In mild pancreatitis, there is inflammation and edema of the pancreas. In severe pancreatitis, there is necrosis of the pancreas, and nearby organs may become injured.As part of the initial injury there is an extensive inflammatory response due to pancreatic cells synthesizing and secreting inflammatory mediators: primarily TNF-alpha and IL-1. A hallmark of acute pancreatitis is a manifestation of the inflammatory response, namely the recruitment of neutrophils to the pancreas. The inflammatory response leads to the secondary manifestations of pancreatitis: hypovolemia from capillary permeability, acute respiratory distress syndrome, disseminated intravascular coagulations, renal failure, cardiovascular failure, and gastrointestinal hemorrhage.
Histopathology
The acute pancreatitis is characterized by acute inflammation and necrosis of pancreas parenchyma, focal enzymic necrosis of pancreatic fat and vessel necrosis. These are produced by intrapancreatic activation of pancreatic enzymes. Lipase activation produces the necrosis of fat tissue in pancreatic interstitium and peripancreatic spaces as well as vessel damage. Necrotic fat cells appear as shadows, contours of cells, lacking the nucleus, pink, finely granular cytoplasm. It is possible to find calcium precipitates. Digestion of vascular walls results in thrombosis and hemorrhage. Inflammatory infiltrate is rich in neutrophils. Due to the pancreas lacking a capsule, the inflammation and necrosis can extend to include fascial layers in the immediate vicinity of the pancreas.Diagnosis
Acute pancreatitis is diagnosed using clinical history and physical examination findings supporting the diagnosis with imaging and pancreatic enzymes. The Revised Atlanta Classification requires two out of three of the following findings for the diagnosis: abdominal pain consistent with pancreatitis, elevated amylase or lipase levels greater than 3 times the upper limit of normal, and imaging consistent with acute pancreatitis. Additional labs may be used to identify organ failure for prognostic purposes or to guide fluid resuscitation rate. If the lipase level is about 2.5 to 3 times that of amylase, it is an indication of pancreatitis due to alcohol. Serum lipase is more sensitive and specific than serum amylase in the diagnosis of acute pancreatitis, and is the preferred test in the diagnosis.Most, but not all individual studies support favor the diagnostic utility of lipase. In one large study, there were no patients with pancreatitis who had an elevated amylase with a normal lipase. Another study found that the amylase could add diagnostic value to the lipase, but only if the results of the two tests were combined with a discriminant function equation.
Reduced lipase clearance due to kidney disease, gastrointestinal or hepatobiliary cancers, pancreatic enzyme hypersecretion, critical illness including due to neurosurgical causes have been shown to increase serum lipase and may complicate the diagnosis of acute pancreatitis.
Differential diagnosis
The differential diagnosis includes:- Perforated peptic ulcer
- Biliary colic
- Acute cholecystitis
- Pneumonia
- Pleuritic pain
- Myocardial infarction
Computed tomography
Regarding the need for computed tomography, practice guidelines state:CT is an important common initial assessment tool for acute pancreatitis. Imaging is indicated during the initial presentation if:
- the diagnosis of acute pancreatitis is uncertain
- there is abdominal distension and tenderness, fever >102 F, or leukocytosis
- there is a Ranson score > 3 or APACHE score > 8
- there is no improvement after 72 hours of conservative medical therapy
- there has been an acute change in status: fever, pain, or shock
- acute change in status
- to determine therapeutic response after surgery or interventional radiologic procedure
- before discharge in patients with severe acute pancreatitis
CT findings can be classified into the following categories for easy recall:
- Intrapancreatic – diffuse or segmental enlargement, edema, gas bubbles, pancreatic pseudocysts and phlegmons/abscesses
- Peripancreatic / extrapancreatic – irregular pancreatic outline, obliterated peripancreatic fat, retroperitoneal edema, fluid in the lessar sac, fluid in the left anterior pararenal space
- Locoregional – Gerota's fascia sign, pancreatic ascites, pleural effusion, adynamic ileus, etc.
Magnetic resonance imaging
While computed tomography is considered the gold standard in diagnostic imaging for acute pancreatitis, magnetic resonance imaging has become increasingly valuable as a tool for the visualization of the pancreas, particularly of pancreatic fluid collections and necrotized debris. Additional utility of MRI includes its indication for imaging of patients with an allergy to CT's contrast material, and an overall greater sensitivity to hemorrhage, vascular complications, pseudoaneurysms, and venous thrombosis.Another advantage of MRI is its utilization of magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography sequences. MRCP provides useful information regarding the etiology of acute pancreatitis, i.e., the presence of tiny biliary stones and duct anomalies. Clinical trials indicate that MRCP can be as effective a diagnostic tool for acute pancreatitis with biliary etiology as endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography, but with the benefits of being less invasive and causing fewer complications.
Ultrasound
Ultrasound is less preferred as a diagnostic test for acute pancreatitis, but it may be used in select cases. Abdominal ultrasonography may be obtained if there is concern of a gallstone blocking the pancreatic duct leading to pancreatitis.Treatment
Early enteral nutrition and aggressive intravenous fluid hydration are indicated in all forms and severities of acute pancreatitis and are associated with lower mortality and complications.Fluid replacement
The specific rate of intravenous fluid replacement in acute pancreatitis is not well established but some experts recommend an initial fluid infusion rate of 5-10 mL of IV fluids per kilogram of body weight per hour and adjusting the rate to meet physiologic parameters such as heart rate, mean arterial pressure, urine output and hematocrit.Isotonic crystalloid solutions are preferred over normal saline for fluid resuscitation and are associated with a lower risk of developing systemic inflammatory response syndrome.
In the initial stages of acute pancreatitis, fluid replacement has been associated with a reduction in morbidity and mortality.
Pain control
Abdominal pain is often the predominant symptom in patients with acute pancreatitis and should be treated with analgesics.Opioids are safe and effective at providing pain control in patients with acute pancreatitis. Adequate pain control requires the use of intravenous opiates, usually in the form of a patient-controlled analgesia pump. Hydromorphone or fentanyl may be used for pain relief in acute pancreatitis. Fentanyl is being increasingly used due to its better safety profile, especially in renal impairment. As with other opiates, fentanyl can depress respiratory function. It can be given both as a bolus as well as constant infusion.
Meperidine has been historically favored over morphine because of the belief that morphine caused an increase in sphincter of Oddi pressure. However, no clinical studies suggest that morphine can aggravate or cause pancreatitis or cholecystitis. In addition, meperidine has a short half-life and repeated doses can lead to accumulation of the metabolite normeperidine, which causes neuromuscular side effects and, rarely, seizures.
Nutritional support
Acute pancreatitis is a catabolic state and with hemodynamic instability or fluid shifts or edema there may be reduced intravascular perfusion to the gut. This reduction in gut perfusion increases the risk of gut necrosis with bacterial translocation with the subsequent risk of sepsis or secondary infections. Enteral nutrition gives one needed caloric intake as well as enhances intestinal motility and blood flow to the gut, reducing these risks. Enteral nutrition is associated with reduced mortality, reduced risk of multi-organ failure and systemic infection in those with acute pancreatitis. In patients with acute pancreatitis, the American Gastroenterological Association recommends early oral nutrition, within 24 hours, rather than keeping the patient fasting. And in those unable to feed orally, the AGA recommends enteral nutrition rather than parenteral nutrition.Antibiotics
Up to 20 percent of people with acute pancreatitis develop an infection outside the pancreas such as bloodstream infections, pneumonia, or urinary tract infections. These infections are associated with an increase in mortality. Fluid collections around the pancreas or areas within the pancreas that experience tissue death may also become secondarily infected requiring the use of antibiotics. When an infection is suspected, antibiotics should be started while the source of the infection is being determined. However, if cultures are negative and no source of infection is identified, antibiotics should be discontinued.Preventative antibiotics are not recommended in people with acute pancreatitis, regardless of the type or disease severity
Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography
In 30% of those with acute pancreatitis, no cause is identified. Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography with empirical biliary sphincterotomy has an equal chance of causing complications and treating the underlying cause, therefore, is not recommended for treating acute pancreatitis. If a gallstone is detected, ERCP, performed within 24 to 72 hours of presentation with successful removal of the stone, is known to reduce morbidity and mortality. The indications for early ERCP are:- Clinical deterioration or lack of improvement after 24 hours
- Detection of common bile duct stones or dilated intrahepatic or extrahepatic ducts on abdominal CT
Surgery
In those with mild acute pancreatitis due to gallstones, cholecystectomy is recommended in the hospital and is associated with a reduced risk of pancreatitis recurrence. In those with gallstone pancreatitis who have severe disease, including the presence of peripancreatic fluid collections, cholecystectomy should be delayed as the fluid collections around the pancreas make surgery technically difficult. The peri-pancreatic fluids also carry a risk of becoming secondarily infected with surgery.Surgery is indicated for infected pancreatic necrosis and diagnostic uncertainty and complications. The most common cause of death in acute pancreatitis is secondary infection. Infection is diagnosed based on 2 criteria
- Gas bubbles on CT scan
- Positive bacterial culture on FNA of the pancreas.
- Minimally invasive management – necrosectomy through small incision in skin or abdomen
- Conventional management – necrosectomy with simple drainage
- Closed management – necrosectomy with closed continuous postoperative lavage
- Open management – necrosectomy with planned staged reoperations at definite intervals
Other measures
- Pancreatic enzyme inhibitors are proven not to work.
- The use of octreotide has been shown not to improve outcomes.
Classification by severity: prognostic scoring systems
Acute pancreatitis patients recover in majority of cases. Some may develop abscess, pseudocyst or duodenal obstruction. About 20% of the acute pancreatitis are severe with a mortality of about 20%.Acute pancreatitis can be further divided into mild and severe pancreatitis. Several clinical scoring tools have been developed to determine prognostic information and may guide certain areas of clinical management, such as need for ICU admission.
Two such scoring systems are the Ranson criteria and APACHE II indices. Most, but not all studies report that the Apache score may be more accurate. In the negative study of the APACHE-II, the APACHE-II 24-hour score was used rather than the 48-hour score.
Some experts recommend using the APACHE II score as well as a serum hematocrit level early during the admission as prognostic indicators.
Ranson score
The Ranson score is used to predict the severity of acute pancreatitis. They were introduced in 1974.At admission
- age in years > 55 years
- white blood cell count > 16000 cells/mm3
- blood glucose > 11.1 mmol/L
- serum AST > 250 IU/L
- serum LDH > 350 IU/L
At 48 hours
- Calcium
- Hematocrit fall >10%
- Oxygen
- BUN increased by 1.8 or more mmol/L after IV fluid hydration
- Base deficit > 4 mEq/L
- Sequestration of fluids > 6 L
Alternatively, pancreatitis can be diagnosed by meeting any of the following:
Alternative Ranson score
Ranson's score of ≥ 8Organ failure
Substantial pancreatic necrosis
Interpretation
If the score ≥ 3, severe pancreatitis likely.
If the score < 3, severe pancreatitis is unlikely
Or
Score 0 to 2 : 2% mortality
Score 3 to 4 : 15% mortality
Score 5 to 6 : 40% mortality
Score 7 to 8 : 100% mortality
APACHE II score
"Acute Physiology And Chronic Health Evaluation" score > 8 points predicts 11% to 18% mortality- Hemorrhagic peritoneal fluid
- Obesity
- Indicators of organ failure
- Hypotension or tachycardia > 130 beat/min
- PO2 <60 mmHg
- Oliguria or increasing BUN and creatinine
- Serum calcium < 1.90 mmol/L or serum albumin <33 g/L >
Balthazar score
Developed in the early 1990s by Emil J. Balthazar et al., the Computed Tomography Severity Index is a grading system used to determine the severity of acute pancreatitis. The numerical CTSI has a maximum of ten points, and is the sum of the Balthazar grade points and pancreatic necrosis grade points:Balthazar grade
| Balthazar grade | Appearance on CT | CT grade points |
| Grade A | Normal CT | 0 points |
| Grade B | Focal or diffuse enlargement of the pancreas | 1 point |
| Grade C | Pancreatic gland abnormalities and peripancreatic inflammation | 2 points |
| Grade D | Fluid collection in a single location | 3 points |
| Grade E | Two or more fluid collections and / or gas bubbles in or adjacent to pancreas | 4 points |
Necrosis score
| Necrosis percentage | Points |
| No necrosis | 0 points |
| 0 to 30% necrosis | 2 points |
| 30 to 50% necrosis | 4 points |
| Over 50% necrosis | 6 points |
CTSI's staging of acute pancreatitis severity has been shown by a number of studies to provide more accurate assessment than APACHE II, Ranson, and C-reactive protein level. However, a few studies indicate that CTSI is not significantly associated with the prognosis of hospitalization in patients with pancreatic necrosis, nor is it an accurate predictor of AP severity.
Glasgow score
The Glasgow score is valid for both gallstone and alcohol induced pancreatitis, whereas the Ranson score is only for alcohol induced pancreatitis. If a patient scores 3 or more it indicates severe pancreatitis and the patient should be considered for transfer to ITU. It is scored through the mnemonic, PANCREAS:- P – PaO2 <8kPa
- A – Age >55-years-old
- N – Neutrophilia: WCC >15x10/L
- C – Calcium <2 mmol/L
- R – Renal function: Urea >16 mmol/L
- E – Enzymes: LDH >600iu/L; AST >200iu/L
- A – Albumin <32g/L
- S – Sugar: blood glucose >10 mmol/L
BISAP score
Predicts mortality risk in pancreatitis with fewer variables than Ranson's criteria. Data should be taken from the first 24 hours of the patient's evaluation.- BUN >25 mg/dL
- Abnormal mental status with a Glasgow coma score <15
- Evidence of SIRS
- Patient age >60 years old
- Imaging study reveals pleural effusion
Epidemiology
The worldwide incidence of acute pancreatitis has increasing from 1961 to 2016 with an average annual percentage increase of 3%, the increased incidence was seen in North America and Europe. The incidence of acute pancreatitis in the United States is 110-140 cases per 100,000 people.In the United States the most common causes include gallstones, which are responsible for 21-33% of cases, followed by alcohol and elevated triglycerides.