| Literature DB >> 34377453 |
Samia Berrichi1,2, Zakaria Bouayed3,2, Khaoula Jebar1,2, Ikram Zaid1,2, Siham Nasri3,2, Houssam Bkiyar1,2, Imane Skiker3,2, Brahim Housni1,2,4.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Respiratory signs are the main revealing symptoms of the COVID-19 infection, however extra respiratory symptoms might as well occur, including digestive manifestations. CASE REPORT: In this paper, we report two cases of acute pancreatitis at the front line of the patient's symptomatology revealing a COVID-19 infection. Both patients had respiratory symptoms suggestive of COVID-19 and abdominal symptoms consistent with acute pancreatitis later-on confirmed through laboratory and CT findings. Our conservative management led to an improvement of the pancreatitis, though the first patient suffered from a severe form of COVID-19 justifying the using of mechanical ventilation and ECMO, while the second patient exhibited a milder form of COVID-19. Although both patients improved in terms of pancreatitis, the overall evolution was very different due to the extent of the respiratory involvement of COVID-19, as one patient exhibited a spectacular improvement of her respiratory state leading to a full recovery, the other patient suffered a rapid worsening of her acute respiratory distress leading to death following ECMO complications. Our two cases join only few cases of COVID-19-induced pancreatitis that have been reported in the literature. DISCUSSION: in our discussion we highlight the association of COVID-19 and acute pancreatitis as it has been reported throughout literature, we then dive into the suggested physiopathological mechanisms that lay grounds for that association, before discussing our two cases, and emphasizing on the need of further studies to fully apprehend the scale of COVID-19's extra-pulmonary involvement in general, and pancreatic in particular.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Cytokine storm; Pancreatitis
Year: 2021 PMID: 34377453 PMCID: PMC8340554 DOI: 10.1016/j.amsu.2021.102693
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Med Surg (Lond) ISSN: 2049-0801
Laboratory findings.
| CASE 1 | CASE 2 | |
|---|---|---|
| WBC (103/ΜL) | 16,68 | 14,13 |
| LYMPHOCYTES (103/ΜL) | 220 | 1910 |
| SERUM LIPASE (U/L) | 2570 | 676 |
| LDH (UI/L) | 3325 | 760 |
| SERUM CREATININE (MG/L) | 10.94 | 9.98 |
| SERUM FIBRINOGEN (G/L) | 2.9 | 6.7 |
| D-DIMERS (NG/ML) | 810 | 2970 |
| CRP (MG/L) | 289,80 | 190.58 |
| SERUM FERRITIN (ΜG/L) | 542.72 | 570.51 |
Fig. 1Coronal lung window showing central and peripheral ground-glass opacities in both lungs with interlobular septal thickening realizing a crazy paving pattern, bilateral pulmonary consolidation.
Fig. 2Axial C+ portal venous phase showing a swollen pancreas, enhanced uniformly, with discrete edema in the peri-pancreatic fat. Balthazar C pancreatitis without necrosis.
Fig. 3a: Axial lung window showing multiple confluent ground-glass opacities and consolidative areas predominantly in the lower lobes. SARS-Cov-2 RT-PCR positive, CT findings consistent with COVID-19 pneumonia CO-RADS 6. b: Axial C + CTPA showing a filling defect seen within the distal right main pulmonary artery (right proximal pulmonary embolism).
Fig. 4Axial C+ portal venous phase showing a mild swelling of the pancreas, uniformly enhanced. Balthazar B pancreatitis without peripancreatic abnormality or necrosis.