The aim of this study was to compare the sensitivity, specificity, and diagnostic accuracy of serum interleukin-6, interleukin-8, beta 2-microglobulin, and C-reactive protein in the assessment of the severity of acute pancreatitis using commercial kits for their respective assays. Thirty-eight patients with acute pancreatitis (25 men, 13 women, mean age 59 years, range 16-97) were studied; the diagnosis was based on prolonged upper abdominal pain associated with a twofold increase of serum lipase, and it was confirmed by imaging techniques. According to the Atlanta criteria, 15 patients had severe illness and 23 had mild disease. The four serum markers were determined in all patients on admission, as well as daily for the following five days. On the first day of the disease, the sensitivity (calculated on patients with severe pancreatitis), specificity (calculated on patients with mild pancreatitis), and the diagnostic accuracy of these serum markers for establishing the severity of acute pancreatitis were 100%, 86%, and 91% for interleukin-6 (cutoff level 2.7 pg/ml); 100%, 81% and 88% for interleukin-8 (cutoff level 30 pg/ml); 58%, 81%, and 73% for beta 2-microglobulin (cutoff level 2.1 mg/liter); and 8%, 95%, and 64% for C-reactive protein (cutoff level 11 mg/dl). The results of our study indicate that, when assayed during the first 24 hr of disease onset, interleukin-6 and interleukin-8 are better markers than beta 2-microglobulin or C-reactive protein for evaluating the severity of acute pancreatitis.
We examined the feasibility of the lipase-amylase (L/A) ratio to differentiate alcoholic from nonalcoholic acute pancreatitis in a large prospective series of patients with acute pancreatitis. One hundred fifty-eight consecutive patients with acute pancreatitis were studied. The pancreatitis was of biliary origin in 112 patients, due to alcohol abuse in 26, due to other causes in 8, and of unknown origin in 12. For all patients, serum, amylase, and lipase levels were determined simultaneously, and the L/A ratio was calculated using the amylase and lipase serum levels expressed as multiples of the respective upper normal limit. The ratios in patients with alcoholic acute pancreatitis ranged from 0.3 to 8 and in patients with nonalcoholic acute pancreatitis from 0 to 19.9. A value of 2.2 for the serum L/A ratio was found to be the best cutoff value for differentiating alcoholic from nonalcoholic acute pancreatitis. Using this limit, the sensitivity, specificity, and diagnostic accuracy of the L/A ratio in determining the alcoholic form of acute pancreatitis were 54%, 82%, and 77% respectively. Our study showed that the L/A ratio is not useful in distinguishing alcoholic from nonalcoholic acute pancreatitis.
Spontaneous cholecystocutaneous fistula is a rare complication of chronic calculous cholecystitis because currently gallstones are diagnosed and treated at an early stage. This occurrence is possible even if it seems actually to be rare. We report the case of a 90-year-old woman admitted to our hospital with diarrhea of 4 days duration and low-grade fever (37.5°C). On physical examination, she had a 10 × 10 cm erythematous swelling and discomfort of the upper right abdominal quadrant; the skin and mucosae were dry. Transabdominal ultrasonography showed a gallbladder with abnormalities of the wall, a single gallstone impacted in the infundibulum and a fluid collection with irregular margins containing fluctuating echoes adjacent to the anterior abdominal wall of the upper right abdominal quadrant. A diagnosis of spontaneous cholecystocutaneous fistula with an abdominal purulent collection was reached. Due to the high anesthesiological risk of the patient, conservative management was carried out with fluids, broad-spectrum antibiotic, albumin and calcium supplementation. Computed tomography drainage of the purulent collection was also carried out. Both clinical and laboratory parameters substantially improved during the following two days, but on the third day of hospitalization, the patient died from a suddenarrhythmic event.
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