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Atheromatous EmbolizationAn Etiology of Acute Pancreatitis
J. G. PROBSTEIN, M.D.;
RAM A. JOSHI, M.B.;
HERMAN T. BLUMENTHAL, Ph.D., M.D.
AMA Arch Surg. 1957;75(4):566-572.
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Among factors implicated in the etiology of acute pancreatitis are the following general categories: (1) obstruction of the common bile and/or pancreatic ducts, (2) dietary deficiencies or toxic substances, such as alcohol, (3) infectious agents, either bacterial or viral, (4) allergic factors, (5) trauma, and (6) vascular factors. The purpose of this communication is to direct attention to a vascular lesion which appears to be associated with acute pancreatitis in cases in which no other causal factor is apparent.
As to the role of vascular lesions in the pathogenesis of acute pancreatitis, some investigators believe that the occlusion of pancreatic vessels can result in acute inflammation of the pancreas without the necessity of intervention of other causal agents, whereas other observers are of the opinion that vascular processes play only a minor or contributory role. We have collected 12 cases of atheromatous embolization from the aorta to pancreatic arteries, in
. . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]
Author Affiliations
Bombay, India; St. Louis
From the Department of Pathology and the Division of Surgery, The Jewish Hospital, and the Department of Surgery, Washington University School of Medicine.
Footnotes
Submitted for publication March 4, 1957.
Read at the 14th Annual Meeting of the Central Surgical Association, Chicago, Feb. 22, 1957.
This investigation was supported by grants from the David May-Florence G. May and the Louis Monheimer Memorial Research Funds.
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