1. Managing complications of chronic pancreatitis: a guide for the gastroenterologist.
- Author
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Capurso G, Tacelli M, Vanella G, Ponz de Leon Pisani R, Dell'Anna G, Abati M, Mele R, Lauri G, Panaitescu A, Nunziata R, Zaccari P, Archibugi L, and Arcidiacono PG
- Subjects
- Humans, Pancreas, Endoscopy adverse effects, Pain complications, Chronic Disease, Gastroenterologists, Pancreatitis, Chronic complications, Pancreatitis, Chronic diagnosis, Pancreatitis, Chronic therapy
- Abstract
Introduction: Chronic pancreatitis is a heterogeneous and complex syndrome that, in most cases, causes pain as a cardinal symptom and affects both the morphology and function of the pancreas, leading to several serious complications., Areas Covered: The present review, based on a non-systematic PubMed search updated to June 2023, aims to present the current available evidence on the role of gastroenterologists in the diagnosis and treatment of both local and systemic complications by either endoscopic or medical treatments., Expert Opinion: At diagnosis and during chronic pancreatitis follow-up, particular care is needed to consider not only the clinically manifest signs and symptoms of the disease, such as pain, jaundice, gastrointestinal obstruction, and pseudocysts, which require multidisciplinary discussion to establish the best treatment option (endoscopic or surgical), but also less evident systemic complications. Pancreatic exocrine and endocrine insufficiency, together with chronic inflammation, addiction, and dysbiosis, contribute to malnutrition, sarcopenia, and osteopathy. These complications, in turn, increase the risk of infection, thromboembolic events, and death. Patients with chronic pancreatitis also have an increased risk of psychiatric disorders and pancreatic cancer onset. Overall, patients with chronic pancreatitis should receive a holistic evaluation, considering all these aspects, possibly through multidisciplinary care in dedicated expert centers.
- Published
- 2023
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