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Diseases of the Pancreas

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Title: Diseases of the Pancreas


1
Diseases of the Pancreas
  • Victor Politi, M.D., Medical Director
  • SVCMC, School of Allied Health Professions,
    Physician Assistant Program

2
Pancreas anatomy
  • The pancreas is an elongated, tapered organ
    located across the back of the abdomen, behind
    the stomach.
  • The right side of the organ (called the head) is
    the widest part of the organ and lies in the
    curve of the duodenum (the first section of the
    small intestine).
  • The tapered left side extends slightly upward
    (called the body of the pancreas) and ends near
    the spleen (called the tail).

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4
Pancreas anatomy
  • The pancreas is made up of two types of tissue
  • exocrine tissue
  • The exocrine tissue secretes digestive enzymes.
    These are secreted into a network of ducts that
    join the main pancreatic duct, which runs the
    length of the pancreas.
  • endocrine tissue
  • The endocrine tissue, which consists of the
    islets of Langerhans, secretes hormones into the
    bloodstream.

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6
Pancreas anatomy
  • The pancreas has digestive and hormonal
    functions
  • The enzymes secreted by the exocrine tissue in
    the pancreas help break down carbohydrates, fats,
    and proteins in the duodenum.
  • These enzymes travel down the pancreatic duct
    into the bile duct in an inactive form.
  • When they enter the duodenum, they are activated.
  • The exocrine tissue also secretes bicarbonate to
    neutralize stomach acid in the duodenum.

7
Pancreas anatomy
  • The hormones secreted by the endocrine tissue in
    the pancreas are insulin, glucagon (which
    regulate the level of glucose in the blood),
    somatostatin (which prevents the release of the
    other two hormones), and many others.

8
What is Pancreatitis?
  • Pancreatitis is an inflammatory process in which
    pancreatic enzymes autodigest the gland

9
  • Normally, digestive enzymes do not become active
    until they reach the small intestine, where they
    begin digesting food.
  • But if these enzymes become active inside the
    pancreas, they start "digesting" the pancreas
    itself

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11
  • The gland can sometimes heal without any
    impairment of function or any morphologic
    changes.
  • This process is known as acute pancreatitis.
  • It can recur intermittently, contributing to the
    functional and morphologic loss of the gland.
  • Recurrent attacks are referred to as chronic
    pancreatitis.

12
  • Acute pancreatitis occurs suddenly and lasts for
    a short period of time and usually resolves.
  • Chronic pancreatitis does not resolve itself and
    results in a slow destruction of the pancreas.

13
  • Either form can cause serious complications.
  • In severe cases, bleeding, tissue damage, and
    infection may occur.
  • Pseudocysts, accumulations of fluid and tissue
    debris, may also develop.
  • Enzymes and toxins may enter the bloodstream,
    injuring the heart, lungs, and kidneys, or other
    organs.

14
Acute edematous pancreatitis
  • Since the pancreas is located in the
    retroperitoneal space with no capsule
    -inflammation can spread easily.
  • In acute pancreatitis, parenchymal edema and
    peripancreatic fat necrosis occur first.
  • This process is known as acute edematous
    pancreatitis

15
Necrotizing pancreatitis
  • When necrosis involves the parenchyma,
    accompanied by hemorrhage and dysfunction of the
    gland, the inflammation evolves into hemorrhagic
    or necrotizing pancreatitis

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17
Necrotizing pancreatitis
  • Pseudocysts and pancreatic abscesses can result
    from necrotizing pancreatitis because of enzymes
    being walled off by granulation tissue (ie,
    pseudocyst formation) or bacterial seeding of
    pancreatic or peripancreatic tissue (ie,
    pancreatic abscess formation).
  • An ultrasound or, preferably, a CT scan can be
    used detect both.

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19
  • The inflammatory process can cause systemic
    effects because of the presence of cytokines,
    such as bradykinins and phospholipase A.
  • These cytokines may cause vasodilation, increase
    in vascular permeability, pain, and leukocyte
    accumulation in the vessel walls.
  • Fat necrosis may cause hypocalcemia.
  • Pancreatic B cell injury may lead to
    hyperglycemia.

20
Mortality/Morbidity
  • Although acute pancreatitis should be noted,
    chronic pancreatitis has a more severe
    presentation as episodes recur.
  • Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), acute
    renal failure, cardiac depression, hemorrhage,
    and hypotensive shock all may be systemic
    manifestations of acute pancreatitis in its most
    severe form.

21
Acute Pancreatitis
  • Some people have more than one attack and recover
    completely after each, but acute pancreatitis can
    be a severe, life-threatening illness with many
    complications.

22
Acute Pancreatitis
  • About 80,000 cases occur in the United States
    each year some 20 percent of them are severe.
  • Acute pancreatitis occurs more often in men than
    women.

23
  • The risk for African American persons aged 35-64
    years is 10 times higher than for any other
    group.
  • African American persons are at higher risk than
    white persons in that same age group

24
History
  • The main presentation of acute pancreatitis is
    epigastric pain or right upper quadrant pain
    radiating to the back
  • The pain may be severe and may become
    constant--just in the abdomen-or it may reach to
    the back and other areas.
  • It may be sudden and intense or begin as a mild
    pain that gets worse when food is eaten.

25
History
  • Nausea and/or vomiting
  • Fever
  • Query the patient about recent surgeries and
    invasive procedures (ie, endoscopic retrograde
    cholangiopancreatography) or family history of
    hypertriglyceridemia.
  • Patients frequently have a history of previous
    biliary colic and binge alcohol consumption, the
    major causes of acute pancreatitis.

26
Physical
  • Tachycardia
  • Tachypnea
  • Hypotension
  • Fever
  • Abdominal tenderness, distension, guarding, and
    rigidity

27
Physical
  • Mild jaundice
  • Diminished or absent bowel sounds
  • Because of contiguous spread of inflammation
    (effusion) from the pancreas, lung auscultation
    may reveal basilar rales, especially in the left
    lung.
  • Occasionally, in the extremities, muscular spasm
    may be noted secondary to hypocalcemia.

28
Physical
  • Severe cases may have a Grey Turner sign (ie,
    bluish discoloration of the flanks) and Cullen
    sign (ie, bluish discoloration of the
    periumbilical area) caused by the retroperitoneal
    leak of blood from the pancreas in hemorrhagic
    pancreatitis.

29
  • This is Grey-Turner's sign with haemorrhage
    appearing in both flanks. It is due to extensive
    retro-peritoneal bleeding and typically occurs in
    haemorrhagic pancreatitis

30
Causes
  • The major causes are long-standing alcohol
    consumption and biliary stone disease.

31
Causes
  • In developed countries, the most common cause of
    acute pancreatitis is alcohol abuse
  • On the cellular level, ethanol leads to
    intracellular accumulation of digestive enzymes
    and their premature activation and release.
  • On the ductal level, ethanol increases the
    permeability of ductules, which allow enzymes to
    reach the parenchyma, resulting in pancreatic
    damage

32
Causes
  • Ethanol increases the protein content of the
    pancreatic juice and decreases bicarbonate levels
    and trypsin inhibitor concentrations. This leads
    to the formation of protein plugs that block the
    pancreatic outflow and obstruction

33
Causes
  • Another major cause of acute pancreatitis is
    biliary stone disease (eg, cholelithiasis,
    choledocholithiasis).
  • A biliary stone may lodge in the pancreatic duct
    or ampulla of Vater and obstruct the pancreatic
    duct, leading to extravasation of enzymes into
    the parenchyma.

34
Minor causes of acute pancreatitis
  • Medications,
  • including azathioprine, corticosteroids,
    sulfonamides, thiazides, furosemides, NSAIDs,
    mercaptopurine, methyldopa, and tetracyclines
  • Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography
    (ERCP)
  • Hypertriglyceridemia
  • (When the triglyceride (TG) level exceeds 1000
    mg/U, an episode of pancreatitis is more likely.)
  • Peptic ulcer disease

35
Minor causes of acute pancreatitis
  • Abdominal or cardiopulmonary bypass surgery
  • may insult the gland by ischemia
  • Trauma to the abdomen or back
  • resulting in sudden compression of the gland
    against the spine posteriorly
  • Carcinoma of the pancreas
  • which may lead to pancreatic outflow obstruction
  • Viral infections, including mumps,
    Coxsackievirus, cytomegalovirus (CMV), hepatitis
    virus, Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), and rubella
  • Bacterial infections
  • such as mycoplasma

36
Minor causes of acute pancreatitis
  • Intestinal parasites, such as ascaris, which can
    block the pancreatic outflow
  • Pancreas divisum
  • Scorpion and snake bites
  • Vascular factors, such as ischemia or vasculitis

37
Acute Pancreatitis - Diagnosis
  • History
  • Physical exam
  • Lab Studies
  • During acute attacks, the blood contains at least
    three times more amylase and lipase than usual.
    Amylase and lipase are digestive enzymes formed
    in the pancreas.
  • Changes may also occur in blood levels of
    glucose, calcium, magnesium, sodium, potassium,
    and bicarbonate.
  • After the pancreas improves, these levels usually
    return to normal.

38
Acute Pancreatitis - Diagnosis
  • Imaging Studies
  • X-ray
  • ultrasound
  • CT

39
Lab Studies
  • A complete blood count (CBC) demonstrates
    leukocytosis (WBC gt12000) with the differential
    being shifted towards the segmented polymorphs.
  • If blood transfusion is necessary, as in cases of
    hemorrhagic pancreatitis, obtain type and
    crossmatch.
  • Measure blood glucose level because it may be
    elevated from B cell injury in the pancreas.
  • Obtain measurements for BUN, creatine (Cr), and
    electrolytes (Na, K, Cl, CO2, P, Mg) a great
    disturbance in the electrolyte balance is usually
    found, secondary to third spacing of fluids

40
Lab Studies
  • Measure amylase levels, preferably the Amylase P,
    which is more specific to pancreatic pathology.
    Levels more than 3 times higher than normal
    strongly suggest the diagnosis of acute
    pancreatitis
  • Lipase levels also are elevated and remain high
    for 12 days. In patients with chronic
    pancreatitis (usually caused by alcohol abuse),
    lipase may be elevated in the presence of a
    normal serum amylase level

41
Lab Studies
  • Perform liver function tests (eg, alkaline
    phosphatase, serum glutamic-pyruvic transaminase
    SGPT, serum glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase
    SGOT, G-GT) and bilirubin, particularly with
    biliary origin pancreatitis.
  • In chronic pancreatitis the enzymes may be normal
    or low due to pancreas burn out

42
Imaging Studies
  • Perform a plain KUB (Kidneys, ureters, bladder)
    with the patient in the upright position to
    exclude viscus perforation (ie, air under the
    diaphragm).
  • In cases with a recurrent episode of chronic
    pancreatitis, peripancreatic calcifications may
    be noted.

43
Imaging Studies
  • Ultrasound
  • can be used as a screening test.
  • If overlying gas shadows secondary to bowel
    distention are present, it may not be specific.

44
Imaging Studies
  • CT scan is the most reliable imaging modality in
    the diagnosis of acute pancreatitis.

45
Pancreatitis, Acute - CT Scan
46
Pancreatitis, Chronic - CT Scan
47
Treatment
  • Treatment depends on the severity of the attack.
  • If no kidney or lung complications occur, acute
    pancreatitis usually improves on its own.
  • Treatment, in general, is designed to support
    vital bodily functions and prevent complications.

48
Treatment
  • Most of the cases presenting to the ED are
    treated conservatively, and approximately 80
    respond to such treatment

49
Treatment
  • Fluid resuscitation
  • Monitor accurate intake/output and electrolyte
    balance of the patient.
  • Crystalloids are used, but other infusions, such
    as packed red blood cells (PRBCs), are
    occasionally administered, particularly in the
    case of hemorrhagic pancreatitis.
  • Central lines and Swan-Ganz catheters are used in
    patients with severe fluid loss and very low
    blood pressure.

50
Treatment
  • Patients should have nothing by mouth, and a
    nasogastric tube should be inserted to assure an
    empty stomach and to keep the GI system at rest.
  • Begin parenteral nutrition if the prognosis is
    poor and if the patient is going to be kept in
    the hospital for more than 4 days.

51
Treatment
  • Analgesics are used to relieve pain. Meperidine
    is preferred over morphine because of the greater
    spastic effect of the latter on the sphincter of
    Oddi.
  • Antibiotics are used in severe cases associated
    with septic shock or when the CT scan indicates
    that a phlegmon of the pancreas has evolved.

52
Treatment
  • Other conditions, such as biliary pancreatitis
    associated with cholangitis, also need antibiotic
    coverage.
  • The preferred antibiotics are the ones secreted
    by the biliary system, such as ampicillin and
    third generation cephalosporins.

53
Treatment
  • Continuous oxygen saturation should be monitored
    by pulse oxymetry and acidosis should be
    corrected. When tachypnea and pending respiratory
    failure develops, intubation should be performed.
  • Perform CT-guided aspiration of necrotic areas,
    if necessary.
  • An ERCP may be indicated for common duct stone
    removal

54
Treatment
  • Surgical Consult
  • For phlegmon of the pancreas
  • Hemorrhagic pancreatitis
  • Patients who fail to improve despite optimal
    medical treatment
  • Patients who push the Ranson score even further
  • Biliary pancreatitis

55
Medications
  • Antibiotics
  • Used to cover the microorganisms that may grow in
    biliary pancreatitis and acute necrotizing
    pancreatitis.
  • The empiric antibiotic regimen usually is based
    on the premise that enteric anaerobic and aerobic
    gram-bacilli microorganisms are often the cause
    of pancreatic infections.
  • Once culture sensitivities are made, adjustments
    in the antibiotic regimen can be done.

56
  • Antibiotics
  • Ceftriaxone (Rocephin), Unasyn, Mefoxitin
  • Ampicillin (Marcillin, Omnipen),Gent, Flagyl
  • Analgesics
  • Meperidine (Demerol)

57
Ranson Scale
  • Ranson developed a series of different criteria
    for the severity of acute pancreatitis
  • For the following catagories-
  • answer each question regarding the patient then
    add up total score for prognosis
  • If answer is no (o point)
  • If answer is yes (1 point)

58
Ranson Scale
  • Present on admission
  • Older than 55 years
  • WBC higher than 16,000 per mcL
  • Blood glucose higher than 200 mg/dL
  • Serum lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) more than 350
    IU/L
  • SGOT (ie, aspartate aminotransferase AST)
    greater than 250 IU/L

59
Ranson Scale
  • Developing during the first 48 hours
  • Hematocrit fall more than 10
  • BUN increase more than 8 mg/dL
  • Serum calcium less than 8 mg/dL
  • Arterial oxygen saturation less than 60 mm Hg
  • Base deficit higher than 4 mEq/L
  • Estimated fluid sequestration higher than 600 mL

60
Ranson Score
  • A Ranson score of 0-2 has a minimal mortality
    rate.
  • A Ranson score of 3-5 has a 10-20 mortality
    rate.
  • A Ranson score higher than 5 has a mortality rate
    of more than 50 and is associated with more
    systemic complications

61
Other Disorders of the Pancreas
62
Pancreatic Cancer
  • Pancreatic cancer is the fourth most common
    cancer in men and women in the US, according to
    the American Cancer Society.
  • The majority of pancreatic cancer occurs in
    people 50 years of age or older

63
  • In the United States, approximately 30,000 people
    die of pancreatic cancer each year.
  • Among cancers of the gastrointestinal tract, it
    is the third most common malignancy and the fifth
    leading cause of cancer-related mortality.

64
  • About 95 of cancerous tumors of the pancreas are
    adenocarcinomas.
  • Adenocarcinomas usually originate in the
    glandular cells lining the pancreatic duct.
  • Most adenocarcinomas occur in the head of the
    pancreas, the part nearest the first segment of
    the small intestine (duodenum).

65
  • Adenocarcinoma usually does not develop before
    age 50 the average age at diagnosis is 55.
  • These tumors are nearly twice as common in men as
    in women and are slightly more common in blacks
    than in whites.
  • Adenocarcinoma of the pancreas is 2 to 3 times
    more common in heavy smokers than in nonsmokers.
  • People with chronic pancreatitis are at greater
    risk as well

66
  • The disease is difficult to diagnose in its early
    stages, and most patients have incurable disease
    by the time they present with symptoms.
  • The overall 5-year survival rate for this disease
    is less than 5.

67
  • Pancreatic cancers can arise from both the
    exocrine and endocrine portions of the pancreas.
  • Of pancreatic tumors, 95 develop from the
    exocrine portion of the pancreas, including the
    ductal epithelium, acinar cells, connective
    tissue, and lymphatic tissue.
  • Approximately 75 of all pancreatic carcinomas
    occur within the head or neck of the pancreas

68
  • Typically, pancreatic cancer first metastasizes
    to regional lymph nodes, then to the liver, and
    less commonly, to the lungs. It can also directly
    invade surrounding visceral organs such as the
    duodenum, stomach, and colon.

69
  • As in other organs, chronic inflammation is a
    predisposing factor in the development of
    pancreatic cancer.
  • Patients with chronic pancreatitis from alcohol,
    especially those with familial forms, have much
    higher incidence and an earlier age of onset of
    pancreatic carcinoma.

70
Cystadenocarcinoma
  • Cystadenocarcinoma of the pancreas is a rare type
    of pancreatic cancer that develops from a
    fluid-filled noncancerous tumor called a
    cystadenoma.
  • It often causes upper abdominal pain and may grow
    large enough for a doctor to feel it through the
    abdominal wall.

71
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72
Mortality/Morbidity
  • Pancreatic carcinoma is unfortunately usually a
    fatal disease.
  • Most patients eventually succumb to the
    consequences of local invasion and metastatic
    cancer, and true long-term cures are rare.
  • Endocrine and cystic neoplasms of the pancreas
    have much better survival rates than pancreatic
    adenocarcinoma.

73
History
  • Unfortunately, the initial symptoms are often
    quite nonspecific and subtle in onset.
  • Patients typically report the gradual onset of
    nonspecific symptoms such as anorexia, malaise,
    nausea, fatigue, and midepigastric or back pain.
  • Significant weight loss is a characteristic
    feature of pancreatic cancer.

74
History
  • Pain is the most common presenting symptom in
    patients with pancreatic cancer.
  • Typically, it is midepigastric in location, with
    radiation of the pain sometimes occurring to the
    mid- or lower-back region.

75
History
  • The most characteristic sign of pancreatic
    carcinoma of the head of the pancreas is painless
    obstructive jaundice.
  • Patients with this sign may come to medical
    attention before their tumor grows large enough
    to cause abdominal pain.
  • Pruritus may accompany obstructive jaundice.

76
History
  • Migratory thrombophlebitis (ie, Trousseau sign)
    and venous thrombosis also occur with higher
    frequency in patients with pancreatic cancer.
  • Depression is reported to be more common in
    patients with pancreatic cancer than in patients
    with other abdominal tumors.
  • In some patients, depression may be the most
    prominent presenting symptom.

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Physical
  • The physical examination findings in a patient
    with pancreatic cancer are usually limited to
    evidence of significant weight loss and some
    mild-to-moderate midepigastric tenderness.
  • Patients with jaundice may have a palpable
    gallbladder (ie, Courvoisier sign) and may have
    evidence of skin excoriations from pruritus.

79
Physical
  • Patients presenting with end-stage disease may
    have ascites, a palpable abdominal mass,
    hepatomegaly from liver metastases, or
    splenomegaly from portal vein obstruction.

80
Labs
  • The laboratory findings in patients with
    pancreatic cancer are usually nonspecific.
  • As with many chronic diseases, a mild
    normochromic anemia may be present.
  • Thrombocytosis is also sometimes observed in
    patients with cancer.
  • The major useful tumor marker for pancreatic
    carcinoma is carbohydrate antigen 19-9 (CA 19-9).

81
  • Gross section of an adenocarcinoma of the
    pancreas measuring 5 X 6 cm resected from the
    pancreatic body and tail. Although the tumor was
    considered to have been fully resected and had
    not spread to any nodes, the patient died of
    recurrent cancer within 1 year

82
  • CTshowing a pancreatic adenocarcinoma of the
    pancreatic head. The gallbladder (gb) is
    distended because of biliary obstruction. The
    superior mesenteric artery (sma) is surrounded by
    tumor, making this an unresectable T4 lesion.

83
Treatment
  • The only therapy that has definitively been shown
    to increase the survival of patients with
    pancreatic cancer is surgical resection.
  • For patients with disease not amenable to
    curative resection, little has been shown to
    significantly impact survival.
  • The mean survival for patients with unresectable
    disease remains 4-6 months.

84
Treatment
  • Other therapies for pancreatic cancer should
    include palliation of the major symptoms of
    disease.
  • Chemotherapy
  • Radiation therapy

85
Pancreaticoduodenectomy (Whipple operation)
  • The standard operation for carcinoma of the head
    of the pancreas is a pancreaticoduodenectomy
    (Whipple procedure).
  • This operation involves resection of the
    pancreatic head the first, second, and third
    portions of the duodenum the distal antrum and
    the distal common bile duct

86
Deterrence/Prevention
  • Smoking is the most significant reversible risk
    factor for pancreatic cancer. Estimates indicate
    that smoking accounts for up to 30 of cases of
    pancreatic cancer.
  • A diet high in energy intake and low in fresh
    fruits and vegetables increases the risk of
    pancreatic cancer.
  • Alcohol consumption does not increase the risk of
    pancreatic cancer unless it leads to chronic
    pancreatitis. A multicenter study of more than
    2000 patients with chronic pancreatitis showed a
    26-fold increase in the risk of developing
    pancreatic cancer.

87
Prognosis
  • The mean survival for patients with unresectable
    disease remains 4-6 months, with a 5-year
    survival rate of less than 3.
  • The median survival for patients who undergo
    successful resection (only 20 of patients) is
    approximately 12-19 months, with a 5-year
    survival rate of 15-20.
  • Although discouraging, these results are still
    markedly better than those for patients with
    unresectable pancreatic carcinoma.

88
Management
  • The management of pancreatic carcinoma is a
    multidisciplinary process.
  • Most patients initially present to their primary
    care practitioner with general symptoms such as
    abdominal pain, weight loss, or fatigue.
  • Patients may also be seen initially by a
    gastroenterologist if they present with
    obstructive jaundice.
  • Typically, the management of pancreatic cancer
    would entail consultations with a
    gastroenterologist, medical oncologist, general
    surgeon or surgical oncologist, and possibly a
    radiation oncologist.

89
Benign Tumors of the Pancreas
  • Insulinoma
  • rare pancreatic tumor
  • secretes insulin
  • 10 cancerous
  • Gastrinoma
  • secretes above average levels of gastrin
  • can cause peptic ulcers
  • 50 cancerous
  • Glucagonoma
  • secretes glucagon
  • Causes rash
  • 80 cancerous

90
Insulinoma
  • An insulinoma is a rare type of pancreatic tumor
    that secretes insulin, a hormone that lowers the
    levels of sugar (glucose) in the blood.
  • Only 10 of insulinomas are cancerous.

91
Insulinoma
  • Symptoms result from low levels of sugar in the
    blood.
  • The symptoms include faintness, weakness,
    trembling, awareness of the heartbeat
    (palpitations), sweating, nervousness, and
    profound hunger.
  • Other symptoms include headache, confusion,
    vision abnormalities, unsteadiness, and marked
    changes in personality.
  • The low levels of sugar in the blood may even
    lead to a loss of consciousness, seizures, and
    coma.

92
Insulinoma
  • Very low levels of sugar and high levels of
    insulin in the blood can indicate the presence of
    an insulinoma.
  • The location must be pinpointed. Imaging
    testssuch as CT, ultrasound, and arteriography
    of the intestinal arteriescan be used to locate
    the tumor, but sometimes exploratory surgery is
    needed

93
Insulinoma
  • The primary treatment for an insulinoma is
    surgical removal - cure rate of about 90.
  • When the insulinoma cannot be completely removed
    and symptoms continue, several drugs (for
    example, streptozocin (Zanosar) and octreotide
    (Sandostatin)can be helpful

94
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95
GASTRINOMA
  • A gastrinoma is a tumor usually in the pancreas
    or duodenum (the first segment of the small
    intestine) that produces excessive levels of the
    hormone gastrin, which stimulates the stomach to
    secrete acid and enzymes, causing peptic ulcers.

96
GASTRINOMA
  • Most people with gastrinomas have several tumors
    clustered in or near the pancreas.
  • About half of the tumors are cancerous.
  • Sometimes a gastrinoma occurs as part of multiple
    endocrine neoplasia, a hereditary disorder in
    which tumors arise from the cells of various
    endocrine glands, such as the insulin producing
    cells of the pancreas.

97
GASTRINOMA
  • The excess gastrin secreted by the gastrinoma
    causes Zollinger-Ellison syndrome (ZES)
  • a rare disorder that causes tumors in the
    pancreas and duodenum and aggressive peptic
    ulcers in the stomach and duodenum

98
Synonyms of Zollinger Ellison Syndrome
  • Gastrinoma
  • Pancreatic Ulcerogenic Tumor Syndrome
  • Z-E Syndrome
  • ZES

99
GASTRINOMA
  • However, as many as 25 of people with (ZES)
    Zollinger-Ellison syndrome may not have an ulcer
    when the diagnosis is made.
  • Rupture, bleeding, and obstruction of the
    intestine can occur and are life threatening.

100
GASTRINOMA
  • For more than half of the people with a
    gastrinoma, symptoms are no worse than those
    experienced by people with ordinary peptic ulcer
    disease.
  • In 25 to 40 of people, diarrhea is the first
    symptom.

101
GASTRINOMA
  • a gastrinoma is suspected when a person has
    frequent peptic ulcers or several peptic ulcers
    that do not respond to the usual ulcer
    treatments.
  • Blood tests to detect abnormally high levels of
    gastrin are the most reliable diagnostic tests.

102
GASTRINOMA
  • High doses of proton pump inhibitors may be
    effective for reducing acid levels and relieving
    symptoms temporarily.
  • About 20 of people who do not have multiple
    endocrine neoplasia can be cured with surgical
    removal of the gastrinoma.
  • If these treatments fail, a total gastrectomy may
    be necessary.

103
GASTRINOMA
  • This operation does not remove the tumor, but the
    gastrin can no longer create ulcers after the
    acid-producing stomach is removed.
  • If the stomach is removed, daily oral iron and
    calcium supplements and monthly injections of
    vitamin B12 are needed, because absorption of
    these nutrients is impaired when stomach juices
    that prepare these nutrients for absorption are
    no longer available.

104
Gastrinoma
105
GASTRINOMA
  • If cancerous tumors have spread to other parts of
    the body, chemotherapy may help reduce the number
    of tumor cells and the levels of gastrin in the
    blood.
  • However, such therapy does not cure the cancer,
    which is ultimately fatal.

106
Glucagonoma
  • A glucagonoma is a tumor of the pancreas that
    produces the hormone glucagon, which raises the
    level of sugar (glucose) in the blood and
    produces a distinctive rash.

107
Glucagonoma
  • About 80 of glucagonomas are cancerous.
  • However, they grow slowly, and many people
    survive for 15 years or more after the diagnosis.
  • The average age at which symptoms begin is 50.
  • About 80 of people with glucagonomas are women.

108
Glucagonoma
  • High levels of glucagon in the blood cause the
    symptoms of diabetes mellitus.
  • Often, the person loses weight.
  • In 90 of people, the most distinctive features
    are a chronic reddish brown skin rash (necrolytic
    migratory erythema) and a smooth, shiny, bright
    red-orange tongue.

109
Glucagonoma
  • The mouth also may have cracks at the corners.
  • The rash, which causes scaling, starts in the
    groin and moves to the buttocks, forearms, and
    legs.

110
Glucagonoma syndrome -- necrolytic migratory
erythema
111
Glucagonoma
  • The diagnosis is made by identifying high levels
    of glucagon in the blood and then locating the
    tumor by arteriography

112
Glucagonoma
  • Ideally, the tumor is surgically removed, which
    eliminates all symptoms.
  • However, if removal is not possible or if the
    tumor has spread, chemotherapy may reduce the
    levels of glucagon and lessen the symptoms.
  • However, chemotherapy does not improve survival.

113
Glucagonoma
  • The drug octreotide also reduces glucagon levels,
    may clear up the rash, and may restore appetite,
    facilitating weight gain.
  • Octreotide may elevate the levels of sugar in the
    blood even more.

114
Glucagonoma
  • Zinc ointment may be used to treat the skin rash.
  • Sometimes the rash is treated with intravenous
    amino acids or fatty acids.

115
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