Does edematous pancreatitis exist in biliary-related pancreatitis? A hemodynamic and histologic study of the progression of bile-induced pancreatitis
A. D. Wells, S. C. Imahori and W. G. Schenk Jr
The progression of pancreatitis induced in dogs by either single or hourly
injections of two different bile solutions was monitored to determine
whether acute necrotizing pancreatitis developed through an earlier mild
interstitial form. In this model of biliary-related pancreatitis, acute
interstitial pancreatitis could not be produced. The earliest lesion
produced, although having the macroscopic appearance of edematous
pancreatitis, was histologically a mild necrotizing form of the disease. If
the bile solution was of sufficient concentration, then further injections
resulted in progression of the pancreatitis from this mild form of
scattered areas of focal acinar necrosis through coalescence of these areas
to areas of parenchymal hemorrhage. Pancreatic blood flow, measured through
its arterial inflow, increased during the earliest phase of the disease,
but then decreased as the disease progressed.