Chronic Pancreatitis

Chronic fibro-inflammatory disease of the pancreas, resulting in progressive and irreversible damage to the pancreatic parenchyma; damage results in loss of exocrine +/- endocrine function

Aetiology

  • Chronic alcohol abuse - 60-80%
  • Idiopathic
  • Pancreatic duct obstruction (congenital or acquired)
  • Autoimmune
  • Tropical countries - areas deficient in methionine, zinc and selenium
  • Hereditary - cystic fibrosis, ⍺1-antitrypsin

Clinical presentation

  • Chronic epigastric/back pain
  • Pain often associated with nausea and vomiting
  • Endocrine insufficiency - impaired glucose regulation or eventual diabetes mellitus
  • Exocrine insufficiency - malabsorption (weight loss, diarrhoea, steatorrhoea)
  • Often concurrent psudocysts are present due to previous recurrent attacks of acute pancreatitis - patients may present with symptoms of mass effect e.g. biliary obstruction or gastric outlet obstruction

Investigations

Imaging

  • CT pancreas - pancreatic calcification or atrophy, pseudocysts
  • MRCP - if CT findings inconclusive
  • AXR - pancreatic calcifications (highly specific but only seen in ~30% of cases)
  • USS
  • ECRP - distorted pancreatic ducts

Management

  • Manage acute episodes appropriately
  • CREON in exocrine pancreas insufficiency
  • Surgery - anastomoses of pancreatic duct and jejunum (Puestow), removal of the diseased portions in head of pancreas (Frey)

Complications

  • Splenic vein thrombosis
  • Pseudoaneurysm
  • Pleural effusions
  • Ascites
  • Pancreatic cancer
  • Pseudocysts, biliary obstruction, duodenal obstruction