Digestive diseases and sciences
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We present a 68-year-old patient who, over a two-year period, was observed to have persistent benign pneumoperitoneum. The free air was present in the abdominal cavity without gastrointestinal perforation or pneumatosis cystoides intestinalis. ⋯ The source of the free air was not clear. Conceivably, microperforations occurring in colonic diverticula or in distended intestinal wall induced the persistent benign pneumoperitoneum.
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The effect of the absence of biliary and/or pancreatic secretions in the duodenum or the enhanced presence of bile at the proximal duodenum on the incidence, severity, number, and location of cysteamine-induced duodenal ulcers was investigated in the rat. Cysteamine produced ulcers on the anterior wall of the duodenum in 75% and on the posterior wall ("kissing ulcers") in 50% of the animals. Diversion of biliary and/or pancreatic secretions from the duodenum increased both the severity and the incidence of the posterior duodenal ulcers. ⋯ Taurocholic acid at nontoxic doses given subcutaneously or orally to nonoperated rats and rats which had bile diverted to the proximal duodenum aggravated the cysteamine-caused duodenal ulcers. Neither proximal nor distal diversion of bile had a major effect on gastric secretion of acid and pepsin in normal or cysteamine-treated rats. We conclude that both bile and pancreatic secretions may directly influence the development of cysteamine-induced duodenal ulcers in the rat.
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Comparative Study
Comparison of serum amylase pancreatic isoamylase and lipase in patients with hyperamylasemia.
We compared results of measurements of total serum amylase, pancreatic isoamylase, and lipase measurements in patients with hyperamylasemia. Serial measurements of these three enzyme levels in patients recovering from acute pancreatitis indicated that pancreatic isoamylase and lipase were elevated above normal to a greater extent and remained elevated much longer than did the total amylase. This finding indicates an appreciable sensitivity advantage of the pancreatic isoamylase and lipase over total amylase measurement during the recovery phase of pancreatitis. ⋯ Thus, in nonmacroamylsemic sera, pancreatic isoamylase and lipase appear to be roughly interchangeable markers of the level of pancreatic enzymes in the blood. An advantage of the lipase assay is that this enzyme is normal in hyperamylasemia caused by macroamylasemia, whereas the inhibitor assay indicates that the pancreatic isoamylase is elevated. Development of automated assays for either pancreatic isoamylase or lipase should lead to the routine use of one of these assays in place of the present reliance on total amylase measurements in the diagnosis of pancreatitis.
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The case of a 35-year-old black woman with a 10-year history of ulcerative colitis and a 3-year history of pyoderma gangrenosum is presented. The pyoderma gangrenosum was treated successfully with topical application of disodium cromoglycate.
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Neutralization of acid was evaluated in rat proximal duodenal segments isolated from biliary and pancreatic secretions. Duodenal ulcerogenic doses of cysteamine produced a significant decrease in acid disposal 0.5-2 hr after treatment. Oral or subcutaneous administration of the duodenal ulcerogen was effective. ⋯ The failure of ethanolamine, a nonulcerogenic structural analog of cysteamine to significantly alter acid disposal suggests that the effect is not due to the toxic properties of the duodenal ulcerogen. The results reinforce the concept that the duodenum is able to dispose of significant quantities of acid. The decrease in acid-handling may contribute to duodenal susceptibility to acid after treatment with ulcerogens and possibly reflects pathophysiologic changes early in duodenal ulceration.