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Early multi-system organ failure associated with acute pancreatitis : a plea for a conservative therapeutic strategy

Journal Volume 66 - 2003
Issue Fasc.2 - Symposium
Author(s) T. Dugernier, M. Reynaert, P.F. Laterre
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Department of Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine, St Luc University Hospital, Hippocrate Av., B-1200 Brussels, Belgium.

The mortality of severe acute pancreatitis still ranges between 10 and 20%. Nowadays, infected pancreatic necrosis is the leading cause of death. Despite advances in intensive care therapy, howe- ver, early and worsening multi-system organ failure remains a source of substantial morbidity and still accounts for 20 to 50% of the deaths. In recent years, the systemic inflammatory response syndrome and the relevant cascades of inflammatory mediators have been implicated as the key factor in the emergence of remote tissue damage. Early multi-system organ failure that supervenes in the first week is typically associated with a sterile necrotizing process. There are no pathophysiological, clinical or economical data to support the practice of debridement of sterile necrosis to prevent or to control early multi-system organ failure. This issue has never been addressed in a controlled study. Besides intensive care support, non-surgical therapeutic modalities including urgent endoscopic sphincterotomy for impacted stones, antibiotic pro- phylaxis for the prevention of pancreatic infection and early jejun- al nutrition have been specifically developed hopefully to attenuate multiple organ failure, to obviate the need of surgical drainage and to improve survival. Fine needle aspiration of necrotic areas must be incorporated in any conservative therapeutic strategy in order to identify and not to jeorpardize those with infected necrosis that remains an absolute indication for drainage. A specific treatment of acute pancreatitis is still lacking, so far. However, there is ample experimental and pathophysiological evi- dence in favour of immunomodulatory therapy in severe acute pancreatitis. The administration of one or several antagonists of inflammatory mediators possibly combined with a protease inhi- bitor may at last provide the opportunity to interfere with the two major determinants of prognosis : the severity of multiple organ failure and the extent of necrotic areas that creates the culture medium for bacterial superinfection. These benefits remain to be substantiated in a controlled study, however. (Acta gastroenterol. belg., 2003, 66, 177-183).

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