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Chronic Pancreatitis

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Definition, Etiology & Epidemiology - Pancreas Under Siege

  • Definition: Chronic, progressive, irreversible inflammatory disease of the pancreas, characterized by parenchymal fibrosis, ductal changes, and loss of exocrine/endocrine function.
  • Etiology:
    • Alcohol abuse: Predominant cause (India: ~60-70%).
    • Tropical pancreatitis: Significant in specific Indian regions.
    • 📌 TIGAR-O classification guides etiological assessment (Toxic-metabolic, Idiopathic, Genetic, Autoimmune, Recurrent/severe AP, Obstructive).
  • Epidemiology: Indian prevalence: ~120-140 per 100,000 population. Marked male predominance. CT scan of chronic pancreatitis with calcifications

⭐ Alcohol and tropical pancreatitis are the leading causes of chronic pancreatitis in the Indian subcontinent.

Pathophysiology & Clinical Features - Scarred & Sore

  • Pathophysiology:

    • Recurrent inflammation & ductal obstruction (stones, strictures) → ↑ intraductal pressure.
    • Progressive pancreatic fibrosis, acinar atrophy, calcification.
    • Neural hypertrophy & perineural inflammation cause chronic pain.
    • Islet cell destruction → endocrine insufficiency (diabetes).
  • Clinical Features:

    • Pain: Dominant; severe, persistent epigastric, radiates to back. Postprandial, relieved by leaning forward. 📌
    • Malabsorption: Steatorrhea (bulky, foul stools), weight loss, fat-soluble vitamin (A,D,E,K) deficiency.
    • Diabetes Mellitus (Type 3c): Pancreatogenic; often brittle, late feature.
    • Nausea, vomiting.

CT: Chronic Pancreatitis with Calcifications & Dilated Duct

⭐ Pain in chronic pancreatitis is often relentless and multifactorial, significantly impacting quality of life and being notoriously difficult to manage effectively.

Diagnosis & Staging - Spotting the Damage

  • Imaging First:
    • CT: Calcifications, ductal dilatation, atrophy.
    • MRCP: Ductal map (strictures, stones).
    • EUS: Most sensitive for early changes (parenchymal/ductal).
  • Function Tests:
    • Direct: Secretin test (gold standard).
    • Indirect: Fecal elastase-1 (< 200 µg/g indicates insufficiency), serum trypsinogen.
  • Severity Staging:
    • Cambridge classification (ERCP/MRCP based).
    • M-ANNHEIM score (multifactorial).

EUS features of chronic pancreatitis

⭐ EUS is the most sensitive imaging modality for detecting early changes of chronic pancreatitis.

Complications of Chronic Pancreatitis - When It Gets Worse

  • Pseudocysts: Fluid collections; risk of pain, infection, rupture.
  • Biliary obstruction: Jaundice, pruritus, cholangitis.
  • Duodenal stenosis/obstruction: Gastric outlet obstruction symptoms.
  • Vascular complications:
    • Pseudoaneurysms (e.g., splenic artery).
    • Venous thrombosis (splenic, portal) → sinistral portal hypertension.
  • Pancreatic ascites/pleural effusion (due to ductal disruption/fistula).
  • Exocrine insufficiency: Steatorrhea, maldigestion, weight loss.
  • Endocrine insufficiency: Pancreatogenic diabetes (Type 3c DM).
  • Chronic pain: Often severe, debilitating.
  • Pancreatic cancer: Risk significantly ↑. Splenic artery pseudoaneurysm in chronic pancreatitis

⭐ Splenic vein thrombosis, a known complication, can cause isolated gastric varices (due to sinistral portal hypertension) leading to upper GI bleeding without esophageal varices typically seen in generalized portal hypertension.

Management (Medical, Endo, Surgical) - Taming the Flame

  • Medical Management:
    • Pain: Analgesia (WHO ladder), adjuncts (pregabalin).
    • Exocrine: PERT (25,000-40,000 U lipase/meal). Low-fat diet.
    • Lifestyle: Alcohol/smoking cessation.
  • Endoscopic Therapy (ET):
    • Indications: MPD stones, dominant strictures.
    • Procedures: ERCP (sphincterotomy, stone removal, stenting).
    • Pain: Celiac Plexus Neurolysis (CPN).
  • Surgical Therapy:
    • Indications: Intractable pain, complications (obstruction, malignancy suspicion), failed med/endo.
    • Drainage (MPD >6-7mm): Puestow (LPJ), Frey (LPJ + head coring).
    • Resection (head mass, non-dilated duct): Whipple, Beger, Distal Pancreatectomy.

⭐ Frey procedure combines pancreatic head excavation with lateral pancreaticojejunostomy, ideal for painful chronic pancreatitis with inflammatory head mass & dilated MPD.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Most common cause: Alcohol abuse; tropical pancreatitis also significant in India.
  • Hallmark symptom: Chronic epigastric pain radiating to the back, often postprandial.
  • Classic triad: Pancreatic calcification (pathognomonic), steatorrhea, and diabetes mellitus (late).
  • Diagnosis: CT scan is gold standard (calcifications, ductal changes); MRCP for ductal anatomy.
  • Key complications: Pseudocysts, biliary/duodenal obstruction, splenic vein thrombosis, pancreatic cancer risk ↑.
  • Surgical indications: Intractable pain, failed medical/endoscopic therapy, or complications. Frey's procedure is common.

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Practice Questions: Chronic Pancreatitis

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A 55-year-old white woman has had recurrent episodes of alcohol-induced pancreatitis. Despite abstinence, the patient develops postprandial abdominal pain, bloating, weight loss despite good appetite, and bulky, foul-smelling stools. Kidney, ureter, bladder (KUB) x-ray shows pancreatic calcifications. In this patient, you should expect to find which of the following?

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Flashcards: Chronic Pancreatitis

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_____ classification is used for assessing severity of acute pancreatitis

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_____ classification is used for assessing severity of acute pancreatitis

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