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©The Author(s) 2024.
World J Radiol. Mar 28, 2024; 16(3): 40-48
Published online Mar 28, 2024. doi: 10.4329/wjr.v16.i3.40
Published online Mar 28, 2024. doi: 10.4329/wjr.v16.i3.40
Pattern | Implication |
A | Usually, pain-free with episodes of mild to moderate pain |
B | Constant mild to moderate pain |
C | Usually, pain-free with episodes of severe pain |
D | Constant mild to moderate pain plus episodes of severe pain |
E | Constant severe pain |
Frequency of pain | |
Intermittent | Pain pattern A or C |
Constant | Pain pattern B, D or E |
Severity of pain | |
Mild-moderate | Pain pattern A or B |
Severe | Pain pattern C, D or E |
Table 2 Cambridge classification diagnostic criteria in chronic pancreatitis[27]
To evaluate chronic pancreatitis from the aspects of pancreatic parenchyma, pancreatic duct morphology, local changes, and so on by CT and US | ||
Normal | Quality study visualising the whole gland without abnormal features | |
Equivocal | One sign only | Main duct enlarged (< 4 mm) |
Gland enlarged (up to 2 × normal) | ||
Cavities (< 10 mm) | ||
Irregular ducts | ||
Focal acute pancreatitis | ||
Parenchymal heterogeneity | ||
Mild changes | Two or more signs | Duct wall echoes increased |
Moderate changes | Irregular head/body contour | |
Marked changes | As above, and with one or more of: Large cavities (> 10 mm), gross gland enlargement (> 2 × normal), intraductal filling defects or calculi, duct obstruction, structure or gross irregularity, contiguous organ invasion |
Table 3 M-Annheim diagnostic criteria of definite chronic pancreatitis[14]
At least one of the following four items should be met |
Pancreatic calcifications |
Moderate or marked ductal lesions (according to the Cambridge classification) |
Marked and persistent exocrine insufficiency defined as pancreatic steatorrhea markedly reduced by enzyme supplementation |
Typical histology of an adequate histological specimen |
Table 4 The relationship between pain and imaging findings of chronic pancreatitis
Ref. | n | Research type | Imaging techniques | Results |
Bornman et al[34], 1980 | 47 | A prospective study | ERCP | The incidence of pancreatic duct obstruction or stricture in patients with painless and painful CP was comparable, indicating that the morphological changes of the pancreatic duct are not related to the occurrence of pain |
Jensen et al[35], 1984 | 101 | A comparative study | ERP | There was no correlation between the degree of pain in CP (no pain, light pain, moderate pain, severe pain) and the dilatation of the main pancreatic duct measured by ERP (the diameter of the main pancreatic duct in the pancreatic body exceeding 5 mm was defined as dilatation) |
Malfertheiner et al [37], 1987 | 64 | A prospective study | CT/ERP | There was a poor correlation between the severity of pain and abdominal imaging features in CP patients, but it was also found that patients with large pancreatic cysts were most often associated with severe pain (62%), while enlargement of pancreatic gland, small cysts, and duct dilatation were roughly the same as different degrees of pain. Most (89%) patients with calcification still had pain and some of them (39%) showed severe pain |
Morgan et al[36], 2003 | 25 | A retrospective study | ERCP | There was a poor correlation between the morphological changes of the main pancreatic duct (whether the duct was dilated or blocked) and pain |
Mullady et al[16], 2011 | 414 | A prospective cohort study | CT/ERCP | The duration of disease in CP patients was not related to either the frequency of pain (intermittent vs constant) or the severity of pain (mild, moderate or severe) |
Bahuva et al[18], 2013 | 54 | A retrospective study | CT/MRCP/EUS | The presence or absence of visceral pain is not significantly related to the severity of CP structural changes, whether the structural changes are severe, mild, or absent |
Frøkjær et al[39], 2013 | 40 | A controlled study | MRCP/DWI | The pancreatic pathological imaging findings of the fibrotic changes as well as atrophy and ductal pathology were not associated with pain |
Wilcox et al[17], 2015 | 518 | A retrospective study | CT/MRI/MRCP/EUS/ERCP | CP patients with different pain patterns, temporal nature of pain (no pain, intermittent, constant) or pain severity (no pain, mild-moderate, severe) were very similar in the distribution of imaging findings |
Madzak et al[2], 2017 | 82 | A prospective cohort study | s-MRI | There was no correlation between pancreatic parenchyma and ductal changes, pain severity, and pain interference scores |
- Citation: Feng Y, Song LJ, Xiao B. Chronic pancreatitis: Pain and computed tomography/magnetic resonance imaging findings. World J Radiol 2024; 16(3): 40-48
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/1949-8470/full/v16/i3/40.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.4329/wjr.v16.i3.40