• Pancreas · May 2002

    Ultrasonographic splanchnic arterial flow measurement in severe acute pancreatitis.

    • Junichi Sakagami, Keisho Kataoka, Yoshio Sogame, Noriko Usui, and Mayuko Mitsuyoshi.
    • Third Department of Internal Medicine, Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine, Kyoto, Japan. junichi@sun.kpu-m.ac.jp
    • Pancreas. 2002 May 1; 24 (4): 357-64.

    IntroductionDuplex ultrasonographic technology is now capable of detecting flow signals in the various splanchnic vessels and calculating the concomitant flow velocities using fast-Fourier transformation.AimTo use Doppler sonography to investigate how splanchnic hemodynamics vary during the early stage of severe acute pancreatitis.MethodologySix patients with severe acute pancreatitis (age, 59.0 +/- 6.57 years; four men, two women) and seven with mild to moderate acute pancreatitis (age, 60.1 +/- 7.41 years; five men, two women) were examined with Doppler sonography immediately after disease onset. The maximum velocity, minimum velocity, mean velocity, pulsatility index, and resistive index were determined from the Doppler spectra from the proper hepatic artery, celiac artery, and superior mesenteric artery. We also examined 15 healthy subjects (age, 59.3 +/- 4.60 years; 10 men, five women) as controls.ResultsThe maximum velocity of the proper hepatic artery in patients with severe acute pancreatitis was significantly higher than that in patients with mild to moderate acute pancreatitis (p = 0.011) and in control subjects (p = 0.0047). Similarly, significant increases in both the minimum velocity and the mean velocity of the proper hepatic artery were observed in patients with severe acute pancreatitis. Neither pulsatility index nor resistive index of the proper hepatic artery showed a significant difference among the three groups. There were no significant differences among the three groups with respect to the flow velocity of the superior mesenteric artery. In contrast, the pulsatility index of the superior mesenteric artery in patients with severe acute pancreatitis was significantly lower than that in patients with mild to moderate acute pancreatitis (p = 0.0058) or in control subjects (p = 0.0024). For patients with acute pancreatitis, a significant inverse correlation was obtained between the maximum velocity of the proper hepatic artery and the pulsatility index of the superior mesenteric artery (r = -0.658, p = 0.0145).ConclusionThe increase in the hepatic arterial flow velocity and the decrease in the superior mesenteric arterial pulsatility index may represent early events of the severe type of acute pancreatitis.

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