Back to Search
Start Over
Bile and pancreatic juice exclusion activates acinar stress kinases and exacerbates gallstone pancreatitis
- Publication Year :
- 2007
-
Abstract
- Hypothesis Bile and pancreatic juice exclusion from gut activates acinar stress kinases and exacerbates gallstone pancreatitis as evidenced by the ameliorating effects of replacement therapy in an experimental model of duct ligation-induced acute pancreatitis. In the early stages of gallstone pancreatitis, bile-pancreatic juice cannot enter the gut. Enteral exclusion worsens pancreatitis by causing feedback hyperstimulation of the exocrine pancreas that activates acinar cell stress kinases. Investigations using a unique surgical model, the Donor Rat Model, showed that duodenal replacement of bile-pancreatic juice in rats with duct ligation attenuates pancreatic stress kinase activation, reduces pancreatic cytokine production, and ameliorates pancreatic morphologic changes. These findings suggest that exclusion-induced acinar hyperstimulation, in the presence of duct obstruction, exacerbates acute pancreatitis via stress kinase activation. Although acinar hyperstimulation has often been implicated in the pathogenesis of acute pancreatitis, the lack of supporting evidence remains a conspicuous void. The proposed hypothesis draws on fresh evidence to present a new paradigm that reexamines the role of exocrine pancreatic hyperstimulation in gallstone pancreatitis pathogenesis.
- Subjects :
- medicine.medical_specialty
Pancreatic disease
Gallstones
Gastroenterology
Article
Pathogenesis
Pancreatic Juice
Internal medicine
medicine
Acinar cell
Animals
Bile
Humans
business.industry
Gallbladder
medicine.disease
Pancreas, Exocrine
Enzyme Activation
medicine.anatomical_structure
Pancreatitis
Pancreatic juice
Acute Disease
Acute pancreatitis
Surgery
business
Protein Kinases
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....f8307b77ccdca913d5a7fc2a3db4c4c7