This study was designed to investigate the long-term effects of early pancreatic resection for acute necrotizing pancreatitis. During 1973-1978 40 resections were performed in our clinic. Eleven patients died initially (28 per cent). None of the four further deaths was due to pancreatitis or associated disorders. Twenty-four patients were re-examined 5-11 years after resection--one patient refused to participate. Five had not been able to return to work because of severe polyneuropathy; one more had retired because of chronic pancreatitis in the pancreatic remnant. Polyneuropathy was found in five further patients. The reason for this high incidence of polyneuropathy (42 per cent) remains unknown. Eight patients still drank excessive alcohol; three of them had had recurrent pancreatitis and dyspepsia, and insulin requiring diabetes. All but 2 (92 per cent) had diabetes, 14 needing insulin--half of them at 6 months to 6 years after the resection. Moreover, 11 patients (46 per cent) suffered from dyspeptic symptoms. The results suggest that because of the high frequency of late complications, in addition to the early complications, early resection of pancreas should be critically re-evaluated as the treatment for acute necrotizing pancreatitis. If resection is used in patients with extreme pancreatic necrosis, careful and continuous postoperative follow-up will be needed.
Since unsaturated fatty acids have been shown to control cell division experimentally the fatty acid composition in human mammary cancers as compared with the healthy surrounding tissue was studied. Both phospholipid and neutral lipid fractions were extracted for study and further lipid peroxidation expressed as thiobarbituric acid reactive substances was measured. For a comparison a benign adipose tissue tumor, lipoma, was studied. There was a 3.6-fold increase in phospholipid contents of cancer as compared with a reference tissue. No such differences were observed between lipoma and surrounding adipose tissue. In the phospholipid fatty acids of mammary cancers there was a marked increase in the relative amounts of unsaturated fatty acids, especially arachidonic acid, while saturated fatty acids were decreased, as compared with a healthy reference breast tissue or lipomas. The data suggest that the fatty acids might have a role in the development of breast cancer, possibly related to the formation of reactive metabolites of unsaturated fatty acids in the initiation of cancer or to their promotional effects.
The fatty acid composition of fractionated phospholipids and neutral lipids was analyzed in human breast cancer tissues and the surrounding, apparently healthy tissue. In the cancer tissues the relative amounts of unsaturated fatty acids were increased in all the phospholipid subclasses analyzed. The differences were more marked in phosphatidylethanolamine than in the other phospholipid fractions and, furthermore, the relative amount of phosphatidyl-ethanolamine was increased in cancerous tissue. In blood-erythrocyte phospholipids, no differences in fatty acid composition could be found between breast cancer and control patients. The present study suggests that the lipid composition of cancerous breast tissues differs from that of the surrounding tissue and may be involved in carcinogenesis.
The diagnosis of necrosis and its extent in acute necrotizing pancreatitis is one main problem in establishing criteria for possible pancreatectomy. With this in mind a clinicopathological analysis was carried out on 54 patients who had undergone pancreatic resection for acute necrotizing pancreatitis. The macroscopic appearance of the gland correlated poorly with its histology. Parenchymal necrosis varied from 0 to 100 per cent of the resected specimen though all the glands were considered totally or subtotally necrotic. In the clinicobiochemical status no criteria were found determining the extent of necrosis. Obesity, hypotension, hypocalcaemia and elevated serum creatinine in severely ill patients (as determined by Ranson criteria) strongly supported extensive peripancreatic and septal necrosis; however, 38 per cent of patients developed necrosis without those stigmata. While waiting for new methods to determine necrosis we prefer conservative treatment. In contrast to our previous tactics we think that resection should be limited to extreme cases in order to avoid resection of glands with limited necrosis and thus mainly reversible parenchymal damage.
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