Pancreas and liver injury are associated in individuals with increased alcohol consumption.

Standard

Pancreas and liver injury are associated in individuals with increased alcohol consumption. / Pace, Andrea; de Weerth, Andreas; Berna, Marc; Hillbricht, Katharina; Tsokos, Michael; Bläker, Michael; Püschel, Klaus; Lohse, Ansgar W.

In: CLIN GASTROENTEROL H, Vol. 7, No. 11, 11, 2009, p. 1241-1246.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Pace, A, de Weerth, A, Berna, M, Hillbricht, K, Tsokos, M, Bläker, M, Püschel, K & Lohse, AW 2009, 'Pancreas and liver injury are associated in individuals with increased alcohol consumption.', CLIN GASTROENTEROL H, vol. 7, no. 11, 11, pp. 1241-1246. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19560556?dopt=Citation>

APA

Pace, A., de Weerth, A., Berna, M., Hillbricht, K., Tsokos, M., Bläker, M., Püschel, K., & Lohse, A. W. (2009). Pancreas and liver injury are associated in individuals with increased alcohol consumption. CLIN GASTROENTEROL H, 7(11), 1241-1246. [11]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19560556?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Pace A, de Weerth A, Berna M, Hillbricht K, Tsokos M, Bläker M et al. Pancreas and liver injury are associated in individuals with increased alcohol consumption. CLIN GASTROENTEROL H. 2009;7(11):1241-1246. 11.

Bibtex

@article{38bd9c34fc2b46d58246ceef99c3b92d,
title = "Pancreas and liver injury are associated in individuals with increased alcohol consumption.",
abstract = "BACKGROUND ; AIMS: Although chronic pancreatitis and liver cirrhosis are common sequelae of excess alcohol consumption, the 2 conditions are rarely associated. We studied the prevalence of simultaneous liver cirrhosis and chronic pancreatitis in alcoholics. METHODS: Postmortem autopsy data from 620 individuals with a history of excess alcohol consumption and 100 nonalcoholics (controls) were analyzed. The individuals were classified into groups based on macroscopic observations of pancreas (no injury, acute pancreatitis, fibrosis, and chronic pancreatitis) and liver (no injury, moderate steatosis, severe steatosis, and cirrhosis). The same classification system was used for histological data, which was used to confirm and correlate macroscopic results. RESULTS: Out of the 183 patients with liver cirrhosis, 33 (18%) had chronic pancreatitis and 93 (51%) had pancreatic fibrosis. Out of the 230 patients with severe steatosis, 37 (16%) had chronic pancreatitis and 97 (42%) were found to have a pancreatic fibrosis. Thirty-three (39%) with chronic pancreatitis also showed liver cirrhosis and 37 (44%) showed severe steatosis. Thirty-eight percent of the patients with a pancreatic fibrosis were found also to have liver cirrhosis and in another 40% severe steatosis. Thirty-five patients showed neither hepatic or pancreatic injury. We found no chronic pancreatitis or liver cirrhosis in the control group (n = 100). CONCLUSIONS: Contrary to common belief there is a close association between pancreatic and hepatic injury in patients with increased alcohol consumption, and the degree of organ damage between the 2 organs correlate.",
author = "Andrea Pace and {de Weerth}, Andreas and Marc Berna and Katharina Hillbricht and Michael Tsokos and Michael Bl{\"a}ker and Klaus P{\"u}schel and Lohse, {Ansgar W.}",
year = "2009",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "7",
pages = "1241--1246",
journal = "CLIN GASTROENTEROL H",
issn = "1542-3565",
publisher = "W.B. Saunders Ltd",
number = "11",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Pancreas and liver injury are associated in individuals with increased alcohol consumption.

AU - Pace, Andrea

AU - de Weerth, Andreas

AU - Berna, Marc

AU - Hillbricht, Katharina

AU - Tsokos, Michael

AU - Bläker, Michael

AU - Püschel, Klaus

AU - Lohse, Ansgar W.

PY - 2009

Y1 - 2009

N2 - BACKGROUND ; AIMS: Although chronic pancreatitis and liver cirrhosis are common sequelae of excess alcohol consumption, the 2 conditions are rarely associated. We studied the prevalence of simultaneous liver cirrhosis and chronic pancreatitis in alcoholics. METHODS: Postmortem autopsy data from 620 individuals with a history of excess alcohol consumption and 100 nonalcoholics (controls) were analyzed. The individuals were classified into groups based on macroscopic observations of pancreas (no injury, acute pancreatitis, fibrosis, and chronic pancreatitis) and liver (no injury, moderate steatosis, severe steatosis, and cirrhosis). The same classification system was used for histological data, which was used to confirm and correlate macroscopic results. RESULTS: Out of the 183 patients with liver cirrhosis, 33 (18%) had chronic pancreatitis and 93 (51%) had pancreatic fibrosis. Out of the 230 patients with severe steatosis, 37 (16%) had chronic pancreatitis and 97 (42%) were found to have a pancreatic fibrosis. Thirty-three (39%) with chronic pancreatitis also showed liver cirrhosis and 37 (44%) showed severe steatosis. Thirty-eight percent of the patients with a pancreatic fibrosis were found also to have liver cirrhosis and in another 40% severe steatosis. Thirty-five patients showed neither hepatic or pancreatic injury. We found no chronic pancreatitis or liver cirrhosis in the control group (n = 100). CONCLUSIONS: Contrary to common belief there is a close association between pancreatic and hepatic injury in patients with increased alcohol consumption, and the degree of organ damage between the 2 organs correlate.

AB - BACKGROUND ; AIMS: Although chronic pancreatitis and liver cirrhosis are common sequelae of excess alcohol consumption, the 2 conditions are rarely associated. We studied the prevalence of simultaneous liver cirrhosis and chronic pancreatitis in alcoholics. METHODS: Postmortem autopsy data from 620 individuals with a history of excess alcohol consumption and 100 nonalcoholics (controls) were analyzed. The individuals were classified into groups based on macroscopic observations of pancreas (no injury, acute pancreatitis, fibrosis, and chronic pancreatitis) and liver (no injury, moderate steatosis, severe steatosis, and cirrhosis). The same classification system was used for histological data, which was used to confirm and correlate macroscopic results. RESULTS: Out of the 183 patients with liver cirrhosis, 33 (18%) had chronic pancreatitis and 93 (51%) had pancreatic fibrosis. Out of the 230 patients with severe steatosis, 37 (16%) had chronic pancreatitis and 97 (42%) were found to have a pancreatic fibrosis. Thirty-three (39%) with chronic pancreatitis also showed liver cirrhosis and 37 (44%) showed severe steatosis. Thirty-eight percent of the patients with a pancreatic fibrosis were found also to have liver cirrhosis and in another 40% severe steatosis. Thirty-five patients showed neither hepatic or pancreatic injury. We found no chronic pancreatitis or liver cirrhosis in the control group (n = 100). CONCLUSIONS: Contrary to common belief there is a close association between pancreatic and hepatic injury in patients with increased alcohol consumption, and the degree of organ damage between the 2 organs correlate.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 7

SP - 1241

EP - 1246

JO - CLIN GASTROENTEROL H

JF - CLIN GASTROENTEROL H

SN - 1542-3565

IS - 11

M1 - 11

ER -