Pancreas facts
Pancreatitis
Pancreatitis Imaging
Pancreas Lab values
Pancreatic Lab Values meaning
100

This organ secretes both exocrine and endocrine hormones.

What is the pancreas.

100

What is the common patient presentation of pancreatitis?

Acute onset of severe epigastric or abdominal pain.

50% of patients state it radiates to the back and is relieved by leaning forward

90% present with nausea and vomiting

Severe pancreatitis can present with dyspnea from diaphragmatic inflammation

100

What are the four possible findings on plain film for Acute Pancreatitis?

What are "sentinel loop, colon cut off, diffuse illeus, and pleural effusion".

- IMPORTANT: The abdominal xray is not diagnostic and is frequently normal. OR it may demonstrate any of the aforementioned.

100

What is the normal range for Amylase?

What is 60-120 units/dL

100

What do elevated Amylase levels indicate and when do they rise? What is their half-life?

What is Pancreatitis and or obstruction of the pancreatic duct flow. Levels rise with 6-12 hours and they have a half life of 10 hours.

200

What are the pancreas exocrine hormones and their function?

- What are Trypsin and Chymotrypsin to digest proteins.


- What is Amylase to digest carbohydrates.

- What is Lipase to digest fats.

200

What does a Physical exam of pancreatitis typically reveal?

Can range from minimal tenderness to severe epigastric tenderness

Can have hypoactive bowel sounds and distention from an ileus

Fever, tachypnea, hypoxemia, and hypotension in severe pancreatitis

Ecchymotic discoloration may be observed in the periumbilical region (Cullon's sign) and on the lower back (Gray Turner's sign) 

Rare cases show pancreatic panniculitis

200

What are the Abdominal ultrasound findings?

What are diffusely enlarged and hypoechoic and peripancreatic fluid appears as an anechoic collection.

- 25 to 35% of patients with acute pancreatitis, bowel gas due to an ileus precludes evaluation of the pancreas or bile duct

200

What is the normal range for Lipase?

What is 0-160 units/L

200

What do elevated Lipase levels indicate and when do they rise? What is their duration?

What is elevated lipids are more specific. Pancreatic disease elevations are 5-10x the normal values. Lipase levels rise in 4-8 hours, peak at 24 hours, and return to normal in 8-14 days.

300

What are the Pancreas endocrine hormones?

What are "insulin, glucagon, somatostatin and pancreatic polypeptide".

300

What is this: 

What is Pancreatic panniculitis. 2-3% of all patients get this fat necrosis.

300

What is the best imaging test for pancreatitis?

What is contrast-enhanced abdominal computed tomography.

This can show:

- focal or diffuse enlargement of the pancreas with heterogeneous enhancement with IV contrast

- Common bile duct stone may be seen

- Pancreatic mass (cancer)

300

Where is Trypsinogen Activation Peptisede realeased and what does it do?

What is normally produced in the pancreas and released into the small intestine.

Trypsinogen is then converted to trypsin and it breaks down proteins.

300

What do low levels and/or elevated levels of Trypsinogen Activation Peptide (TAP) tell you?

Low levels: pancreatic insufficiency 

Elevated levels: Abnormal production, Acute pancreatitis, Cystic fibrosis (used for screening for this), and Pancreatic cancer

400

What are the major contributing factors to the common disorders of the pancreas such as pancreatitis and pancreatic cancer?

What are "stemming from gallbladder stones, smoking, high consumption of alcohol, and DM".

400

What are the four Laboratory values assessed for suspected Pancreatitis?

What are "Amylase, Lipase, Trypsinogen peptide (TAP), and C-reactive protein (CRP)".

400

What imaging test can you use in acute situations or when patient cannot handle CT contrast as in allergy or renal failure?

What is Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).

- diffuse or focal enlargement of the pancreas with blurred margins

- this test takes long

400

What is the normal range for C-Reactive Protein?

What is <10mg/L SI units.

400

What does C-Reactive Protein indicate and is specific or nonspecific?

What is it as an acute phase reactant protein used to indicate an inflammatory illness. It is nonspecific!

500

Where is the pancreas located anatomically?

What is sits across the back of the abdomen, behind the stomach. The head of the pancreas is on the right side of the abdomen and is connected to the duodenum.

500

What are the Imaging results found on Abdominal and Chest xrays for pancreatitis? Think Mild disease, Moderate disease, and Severe disease.

Mild disease: no findings

Moderate disease: localized ileus in a segment of small intestine (sentinel loop)

Severe disease: colon cut off sign: paucity of air in the colon distal to the splenic flexure due to functional spasm of the descending colon

Other findings (1/3 of patients)

- elevation of a hemidiaphragm, pleural effusions, basal atelectasis,  pulmonary infiltrates, or acute respiratory distress syndrome

500

When are elevated levels not due to a pancreatic origin? 

What are Penetrating peptic ulcer, duodenal obstruction, bowel perforation, patients with mumps (salivary glands), severe diabetic ketoacidosis, appendicitis, ruptured ectopic pregnancy, ovarian cancer.

M
e
n
u