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©The Author(s) 2016.
World J Gastrointest Pathophysiol. Feb 15, 2016; 7(1): 186-198
Published online Feb 15, 2016. doi: 10.4291/wjgp.v7.i1.186
Published online Feb 15, 2016. doi: 10.4291/wjgp.v7.i1.186
Table 1 Epidemiology of intra-abdominal hypertension and abdominal compartment syndrome in acute pancreatitis as previously reported in literature n (%)
Ref. | IAP monitoring | Definition of IAH | Incidence of IAH (among patients with SAP) | Definition of ACS | Incidence of ACS (among patients with SAP) |
Pupelis et al[3] | Selected | NA | NA | IAP > 25 mmHg | 18 (25) |
De Waele et al[12] | Selected | IAP > 15 mmHg | 21 (78) | NA | NA |
Pupelis et al[13] | Selected | NA | NA | NA | NA |
Keskinen et al[14] | Selected | IAP > 12 mmHg | 31 (84) | IAP > 20 mmHg with new organ dysfunction | 18 (49) |
Zhang et al[15] | Unselected | IAP > 10 cm H2O (NA) | 68 (76) | NA | NA |
Rosas et al[16] | Unselected (45 patients) | NA | NA | NA | NA |
Chen et al[17] | Unselected | IAP > 12 mmHg | 44 (59) | IAP > 20 mmHg with new organ dysfunction | 20 (27) |
Al-Bahrani et al[18] | Unselected | IAP > 15 mmHg | 11 (61) | IAH with organ dysfunction | 10 (56) |
Dambrauskas et al[19] | Unselected | IAP > 12 mmHg | 19 (43) | IAP > 20 mmHg with new organ dysfunction | 6 (14) |
Mentula et al[20] | Unselected (26 patients with ACS) | NA | NA | IAP > 20 mmHg with new organ dysfunction | NA |
Ke et al[21] | Unselected | IAP > 12 mmHg | 36 (62) | IAP > 20 mmHg with new organ dysfunction | 7 (12) |
Bezmarevic et al[22] | Unselected | IAP > 12 mmHg | 36 (71) (among patients with AP) | IAP > 20 mmHg with new organ dysfunction | 6 (12) (among patients with AP) |
27 (97) (among patients with SAP) | 6 (21) (among patients with SAP) | ||||
Boone et al[23] | Selected (12 patients undergoing decompressive laparotomy for ACS) | NA | NA | IAP > 20 mmHg with new organ dysfunction | NA |
Davis et al[24] | Selected | NA | NA | IAP > 20 mmHg with new organ dysfunction | 16 (35) |
Bhandari et al[25] | Unselected | IAP > 12 mmHg | 8 (20) (among patients with AP) | IAP > 20 mmHg with new organ dysfunction | 3 (7.5) (among patients with AP) |
8 (50) (among patients with SAP) | 3 (19) (among patients with SAP) | ||||
Aitken et al[26] | Unselected | IAP > 12 mmHg | 36 (17) (among patients with AP) | NA | NA |
Table 2 Comparison of Atlanta, revised Atlanta and determinant based classification system of acute pancreatitis
Atlanta[7] | Revised atlanta[27] | Determinant based system[28] | |
Mild | Minimal organ dysfunction and an uneventful recovery; lacks the features of severe acute pancreatitis. Usually normal enhancement of pancreatic parenchyma on contrast-enhanced computed tomography | No organ failure | No (peri)pancreatic necrosis and no organ failure2 |
No local or systemic complications | |||
Moderate | Organ failure2 that resolves within 48 h (transient organ failure) and/or local or systemic complications without persistent organ failure | Sterile (peri)pancreatic necrosis and/or transient organ failure (< 48 h)2 | |
Severe | Associated with organ failure1 and/or local complications such as acute fluid collections, necrosis, abscess or pseudocyst | Persistent organ failure2 (> 48 h) | Infected (peri)pancreatic necrosis or persistent organ failure (> 48 h)2 |
Single organ failure | |||
Multiple organ failure | |||
Critical | Infected (peri)pancreatic necrosis and persistent organ failure (> 48 h)2 |
Table 3 Modified Marshall scoring system for organ dysfunction[29]
Organ System | Score | ||||
0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | |
Respiratory (PaO2/FiO2) | > 400 | 301-400 | 201-300 | 101-200 | ≤ 101 |
Renal1 | |||||
(serum creatinine, mmol/L) | ≤ 134 | 134-169 | 170-310 | 311-439 | > 439 |
(serum creatinine, mg/dL) | < 1.4 | 1.4-1.8 | 1.9-3.6 | 3.6-4.9 | > 4.9 |
Cardiovascular (systolic blood pressure, mmHg)2 | > 90 | < 90 and fluid responsive | < 90 and not fluid responsive | < 90, pH < 7.3 | < 90, pH < 7.2 |
Table 4 Ways in which intra-abdominal hypertension/abdominal compartment syndrome can be predisposed in patients with acute pancreatitis
Diminished abdominal wall compliance |
Prone positioning, head of bed > 30° |
High body mass index, central obesity |
Acute respiratory failure, especially with elevated intrathoracic pressure |
Edema due to excess fluid administered during resuscitation |
Increased intra-luminal contents |
Gastroparesis |
Ileus |
Colonic pseudo-obstruction |
Increased abdominal contents |
Ascites (due to causes such as acute fluid collections, liver dysfunction) |
Capillary leak / fluid resuscitation (overload) |
Acidosis (pH < 7.2) |
Hypotension |
Hypothermia (core temperature < 33 °C) |
Coagulopathy (platelets < 55000/mm3 or prothrombin time > 15 s or partial thromboplastin time > 2 times normal or international standardised ratio > 1.5) |
Massive fluid resuscitation (> 5 L/d) |
Oliguria |
Sepsis |
- Citation: Jaipuria J, Bhandari V, Chawla AS, Singh M. Intra-abdominal pressure: Time ripe to revise management guidelines of acute pancreatitis? World J Gastrointest Pathophysiol 2016; 7(1): 186-198
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/2150-5330/full/v7/i1/186.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.4291/wjgp.v7.i1.186