In our case, the history, clinical findings, negative biochemistry and CT and MIBG scans indicated that the lesion might be a non-catecholamine-secreting paraganglioma. The final diagnosis of a vascular malformation was unexpected but revealed an interesting differential diagnosis of a rare pathology. Retroperitoneal vascular malformations of the choledochus, kidney and pancreas have been described but are rare conditions which may cause digestive or urinary tract bleeding.8 In this case the symptoms were unrelated to the excised lesion.
Final diagnosisBenign vascular malformation.
The current study was based on Computed Tomography (CT) findings and results. We found 63% of patients with acute interstitial edematous pancreatitis, and we found 37% of patients with acute necrotic pancreatitis in 46 cases. Based on our findings, we observed bulky pancreas among 26 cases (56.52%), 17 cases (36.95%) of pancreatic necrosis, 9 cases of pancreatic atrophy, 11 cases of pseudocyst, and 9 cases of peri-pancreatic fluid. When we evaluated the Modified CT Severity index among the study cases, we observed that 19.56% cases have mild index, the majority (56.52% cases) have moderate index while 23.91% have severe index. We also found that majority of the cases were clinically cured and discharged, i.e., 47.82%. 19.56% of the total study subjects reported recurrence of episodes of pancreatitis, while 30.43% of the total patients turned into chronic pancreatitis. This study presents a cross-sectional hospital-based analytical study carried out among 46 cases of AP referred to under the radiology department for further diagnostic evaluation, in a tertiary healthcare facility in Maharashtra. The present study Data Source included all the AP patients referred to the radiological department in a tertiary health research center. They met the standards for inclusiveness, which assented to the analysis. Type of study is Hospital analytical based study. The study duration is 18 months. Data collection was done through semi-structured, pre-designed, and pre-validated proformas in patients meeting inclusion requirements that included disease history, clinical outcomes, investigative records, and descriptions of surgical interventions.
Background: Intima-media thickness (IMT) is a useful marker in early detection of atherosclerotic lesions in carotid arteries in Type-2 Diabetes Mellitus (T2DM) patients. The study was conducted to determine the association of IMT with various physical and biochemical parameters in the Indian population. Objective: To compare IMT of common and internal carotid arteries in T2DM patients and healthy individuals and study the correlation of IMT with physical and biochemical parameters. Methods: Case group with T2DM (n=27) were matched with Control group consisting of healthy individuals (n=27) of similar age and sex were included. Physical parameters and routine biochemical data were collected and compared. Ultrasonographical imaging of the common and internal carotid arteries of both sides were performed presence of plaque was observed. Data was analyzed by software IBM® SPSS Statistics V20.0. For all analyses, P<0.05 was considered as statistically significant. Results: Mean IMT value obtained in case and control group are 0.711±0.14 mm and 0.601±0.16 mm respectively (P=0.005). Presence of plaque was noticed in 37.03% subjects in case group and in 14.81% subjects in control group. Mean IMT was significantly higher for smoker than non-smokers (P=0.004). Fasting blood sugar, postprandial blood sugar, Postprandial triglycerides and total cholesterol were significantly higher in case group (P<0.05). There was a strong family history of T2DM in case group (51.85%) compared to control group (14.81%) with a statistical significance between them (P=0.009). Conclusion: IMT of common and internal carotid arteries have a significant association in T2DM patients compared to healthy subjects and IMT is significantly associated with physical and biochemical parameters.
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