It has been suggested that leucocytes play an important role in the pathogenesis of complicated pancreatitis. Indeed, increased plasma concentrations of neutrophil elastase as a marker of neutrophil activation could be detected in patients with a severe course of the disease. Recently, interleukin-8 (IL-8) has been described as a novel neutrophil activating peptide. To determine the role of IL-8 in acute pancreatitis we measured its serum concentrations by a specific enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay in 10 patients with acute pancreatitis daily during the first week of hospitalization. IL-8 levels were compared with plasma concentrations of neutrophil elastase and the clinical course of the disease. Three of the patients had uncomplicated pancreatitis, while seven showed various extrapancreatic complications. Patients with complicated pancreatitis had statistically significant (P less than 0.05) higher mean values of IL-8 (121 +/- 41 pg/ml-1 vs. 13 +/- 6 pg ml-1, mean +/- SEM) and neutrophil elastase (547 +/- 35 ng ml-1 vs. 250 +/- 20 ng ml-1) than patients with uncomplicated disease. There was a positive correlation (r = 0.52, P less than 0.0001) between IL-8 and neutrophil elastase in the lower concentration range of IL-8 (less than 100 pg ml-1). At IL-8 levels greater than 100 pg ml-1 neutrophil elastase was always greatly elevated; however, under these conditions the relationship between IL-8 and elastase was no longer linear. No measurable IL-8 concentrations were found when plasma elastase was less than 200 ng ml-1. During follow-up, initially elevated IL-8 concentrations decreased in correlation with clinical improvement.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Complexes of granulocyte elastase and alpha 1-antitrypsin are markers for granulocyte activation. In 75 patients with acute pancreatitis these complexes were immunologically determined daily in plasma during the first week of hospitalization. Patients were classified into three groups: mild pancreatitis (I, less than or equal to 1 complication, N = 34), severe pancreatitis (II, greater than or equal to 2 complications, N = 29), lethal outcome (III, N = 12). Initially, granulocyte elastase (mean +/- SEM) was lower in group I (348 +/- 39 micrograms/liter) as compared to groups II (897 +/- 183 micrograms/l) and III (799 +/- 244 micrograms/liter), P less than 0.001 for I vs II + III. Initial elastase concentrations greater than 400 micrograms/liter were consistent with a severe or fatal course of the disease but did not distinguish between severe and lethal pancreatitis. In patients with mild or severe disease, mean elastase concentrations decreased continuously during the following days (197 +/- 15 micrograms/liter in mild cases, 325 +/- 30 micrograms/liter in severe cases at day 7). In patients with lethal disease, however, mean elastase concentrations even increased at day 2 and remained higher than 700 micrograms/liter during the observation period. At days 1 and 2 the predictive value for severe or lethal disease of raised (greater than 400 micrograms/liter) elastase concentrations [positive predictive value (PPV) 82%, negative predictive value (NPV) 81%] was better than that of elevated (greater than 100 mg/liter) C-reactive protein (PPV 73%, NPV 73%), elevated (greater than 4.0 g/liter) alpha 1-antitrypsin (PPV 59%, NPV 50%), or decreased (less than 1.5 g/liter) alpha 2-macroglobulin (PPV 82%, NPV 67%).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
The infiltration of leukocytes has been linked to the pathophysiology of complicated or severe pancreatitis. We have tested the ability of leukocyte scintigraphy using technetium-99m-hexamethyl propylene amine oxine (HM-PAO) as label to demonstrate the localization of leukocytes in the pancreas during acute pancreatitis. Twenty-eight patients with acute pancreatitis (eight with biliary, 13 with alcoholic, and seven with unknown origin) were studied with leukocyte scintigraphy using planar imaging and single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT). Fourteen patients had a mild (group I), II a severe (group II), and three a lethal outcome (group III) of pancreatitis. All patients of group III, six of group II, and two of group I had a positive leukocyte scan. Thus, the sensitivity of leukocyte scintigraphy for the detection of a lethal course of acute pancreatitis was 100%, of a severe course 54%, and of a severe or lethal course 64%. The specificity of a negative scan for a mild pancreatitis was 86%. Comparison of the results of leukocyte scintigraphy with those of contrast enhanced CT showed that six of eight patients with pancreatic necrosis in CT had a positive leukocyte scan, but only five of 20 patients without detectable pancreatic necrosis in CT. In summary, leukocyte infiltration into the pancreas during pancreatitis can be demonstrated by noninvasive leukocyte scintigraphy using technetium-99m-HM-PAO as label. A correlation between the severity of the disease and leukocyte infiltration exists.
The correlation of the preoperative staging by CT with the postoperative staging was prospectively investigated in 112 patients with carcinoma of the rectum. The influence of CT on the choice of surgical treatment was also proven. The evaluation of the infiltration of perirectal tissue and especially of other organs is possible with CT. According to TNM classification the pre- and postoperative staging showed identical results by conventional diagnostic methods in T1 in 7/16, in T2 in 22/38, in T3 in 37/49 and in T4 in 5/9 patients. With the additional CT identical results were found in T1 in 7/14, in T2 in 25/31, in T3 in 49/53 and in T4 in 13/14 cases. Thus, the preoperative staging turned out to be correct with CT in 94/112 cases (83.9%). By conventional diagnostic methods identical results were found in 71/112 patients (63.4%). The infiltration of other organs was suspected preoperatively in 24 cases with CT and was found intraoperatively in 30/112 (accuracy 94.6%, sensitivity 88%, specificity 96%). Metastases of lymph nodes were suspected in the tomograms in 32/49 patients (65.3%). By the differentiated interpretation of the tumor growth with special regard to the "Grenzlamellen" of the rectum the CT gives important information for planning therapy.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2025 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.