Silvio Nadalin1, Paolo Girotti, Alfred Königsrainer. 1. Department of General, Visceral and Transplant Surgery, Tuebingen University Hospital, Germany. silvio.nadalin@med.uni-tuebingen.de
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Systematic and detailed analysis of risk factors, pathophysiology, clinical manifestation, diagnosis and management of graft pancreatitis in its different forms, that is acute and chronic graft pancreatitis (A-GP and C-GP), and A-GP being further distinguished into: physiological (P-AGP), early (E-AGP) and late AP (L-AGP). RECENT FINDINGS: Graft pancreatitis is the second most-frequent complication following pancreas transplantation. P-AGP is an unavoidable entity related to ischemic reperfusion injury. It is usually clinically silent. It is a timely and prognostically self-limited process. E-AGP occurs within 3 months after pancreas transplantation (PTx) in 35% of cases and is associated with high rates of graft loss (78-91%). Clinical signs are pain, systemic inflammatory response (SIRS) and haematuria. Therapy can be medical, interventional and surgical. L-AGP occurs 3 months following PTx in 14-25% of cases and represents an uncommon cause of graft loss. Typical clinical signs are pain, abdominal tenderness and fever. Typical laboratory signs are hyperamylasaemia, hyperglycaemia and hypercreatininaemia. Therapy is usually conservative. C-GP is difficult to be distinguished from chronic rejection and is associated to graft loss in 4-10% of cases. Recurrent A-GPs and infections are the main risk factors. Specific symptoms are chronic abdominal malaise, constipation and recurrence of DM. Isolated hyperglycaemia is typical of C-GP. The therapy is usually conservative. SUMMARY: This systematic analysis of different manifestations of graft pancreatitis provides the basis for a clinical approach to tackling this complex entity.
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Systematic and detailed analysis of risk factors, pathophysiology, clinical manifestation, diagnosis and management of graft pancreatitis in its different forms, that is acute and chronic graft pancreatitis (A-GP and C-GP), and A-GP being further distinguished into: physiological (P-AGP), early (E-AGP) and late AP (L-AGP). RECENT FINDINGS:Graft pancreatitis is the second most-frequent complication following pancreas transplantation. P-AGP is an unavoidable entity related to ischemic reperfusion injury. It is usually clinically silent. It is a timely and prognostically self-limited process. E-AGP occurs within 3 months after pancreas transplantation (PTx) in 35% of cases and is associated with high rates of graft loss (78-91%). Clinical signs are pain, systemic inflammatory response (SIRS) and haematuria. Therapy can be medical, interventional and surgical. L-AGP occurs 3 months following PTx in 14-25% of cases and represents an uncommon cause of graft loss. Typical clinical signs are pain, abdominal tenderness and fever. Typical laboratory signs are hyperamylasaemia, hyperglycaemia and hypercreatininaemia. Therapy is usually conservative. C-GP is difficult to be distinguished from chronic rejection and is associated to graft loss in 4-10% of cases. Recurrent A-GPs and infections are the main risk factors. Specific symptoms are chronic abdominal malaise, constipation and recurrence of DM. Isolated hyperglycaemia is typical of C-GP. The therapy is usually conservative. SUMMARY: This systematic analysis of different manifestations of graft pancreatitis provides the basis for a clinical approach to tackling this complex entity.
Authors: A D Barlow; M O Hamed; D H Mallon; R J Brais; F M Gribble; M A Scott; W J Howat; J A Bradley; E M Bolton; G J Pettigrew; S A Hosgood; M L Nicholson; K Saeb-Parsy Journal: Am J Transplant Date: 2015-05-18 Impact factor: 8.086
Authors: Nora Jahn; Maria Theresa Voelker; Sven Laudi; Sebastian Stehr; Stefan Schneeberger; Gerald Brandacher; Elisabeth Sucher; Sebastian Rademacher; Daniel Seehofer; Robert Sucher; Hans Michael Hau Journal: J Clin Med Date: 2022-05-03 Impact factor: 4.964