Editorial
Copyright ©2012 Baishideng Publishing Group Co.
World J Gastrointest Pathophysiol. Jun 15, 2012; 3(3): 60-70
Published online Jun 15, 2012. doi: 10.4291/wjgp.v3.i3.60
Table 1 Causes of acute pancreatitis[6,9]
Etiology of acute pancreatitis
Toxic-metabolicAlcohol Hyperlipidemia, hypercalcemia Drugs and pills Organophosphorus and other toxic substances Venoms (scorpion, spiders)
MechanicalBiliary: lithiasis, microlithiasis, sludge Congenital malformations Pancreas divisum Annular pancreas Anatomical variants: Duodenal duplication Duodenal diverticulum Choledochal cyst Ampullary dysfunction and stenosis Trauma
GeneticFamilial Sporadic
MiscellaneaVascular Hypotension Vasculitis Embolisms Hypercoagulability Autoimmune associated to other autoimmune disorders Sjögren syndrome Primary sclerosing cholangitis Celiac disease Autoimmune hepatitis Infections: Virus: mumps, Coxsackie A, HIV, CMV Bacteria: Mycobacterium tuberculosis Parasites: Ascaris Other: Mycoplasma Idiopathic
Table 2 Definitions for acute pancreatitis according to the Atlanta classification[1,6]
Criteria of illness severity in acute pancreatitis
Local complicationsNecrosis: focal or diffuse area of non viable pancreatic parenchyma, with necrosis of peripancreatic fat (> 30% of the gland or > 3 cm) Pseudocyst: pancreatic juice collection surrounded by a wall of granulation or fibrous tissue that is developed as a consequence of acute or chronic pancreatitis or pancreatic traumatism Abscess: pus collection well defined that has scarce or no amount of pancreatic necrosis
Systemic complications (organic failure)Respiratory failure: PaO2 < 60 mmHg Shock: systolic BP < 90 mmHg Renal failure: creatinine > 2 mg/dL after rehydration Upper gastrointestinal bleeding: > 500 mL/24 h
Bad prognosis dataRanson’s scale ≥ 3 APACHE II scale ≥ 8
Table 3 The bedside index for severity in acute pancreatitis prognosis system[25]
Parameters
Blood urea nitrogenBUN > 25 mg/dL
Impaired mental statusConscious status impairment
Systemic inflammatory responseSIRS criteria presence1
Age> 60 yr
Pleural effusionPleural effusion at X ray
Table 4 Balthazar score system[26]
GradeComputer tomography findings
ANormal pancreas
BPancreatic focal or diffuse bigger size, including irregular contour or nonhomogeneous attenuation
CGrade B + pancreatic inflammation
DGrade C + fluid collection
EGrade D + 2 or more fluid collections with or without the presence of gas in the pancreas or next to it
Table 5 Computer tomography index of illness severity for acute pancreatitis[27]
Balthazar’s CT gradeScoreNecrosis at CT (%)Score
A0None0
B1< 302
C230-504
D3> 506
E4--