The spectrum of pancreatic exocrine and endocrine (Beta-cell) function in tropical calcific pancreatitis
Yajnik, C. S. ; Shelgikar, K. M. ; Sahasrabudhe, R. A. ; Naik, S. S. ; Pai, V. R. ; Alberti, K. G. M. M. ; Hockaday, T. D. R. ; Katrak, A. ; Dandona, P.
Springer
Published 1990
Springer
Published 1990
ISSN: |
1432-0428
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Keywords: |
Tropical-calcific-pancreatitis ; fibro-calculous-pancreatic-diabetes ; immunoreactive-trypsin ; C-peptide ; immunoreactive insulin ; oral glucose tolerance test
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Source: |
Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
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Topics: |
Medicine
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Notes: |
Summary Exocrine pancreatic marker (immunoreactive-trypsin) and endocrine Beta-cell function (plasma insulin and C-peptide during an oral glucose tolerance test) were studied in 40 subjects with tropical-calcific-pancreatitis [seven non-diabetic, seven with impaired-glucose-tolerance and 26 diabetic (fibro-calculous-pancreatic-diabetes)]. In non-diabetic and impaired-glucose-tolerance subjects there was evidence of active pancreatitis in some and exocrine function was partially preserved. Fibro-calculous-pancreatic-diabetic subjects showed severely diminished exocrine pancreatic function; none showed ‘pancreatitic’ elevation of immunoreactive-trypsin. Beta-cell function was preserved in non-diabetic and impaired-glucose-tolerance subjects; diabetic subjects showed variable Beta-cell function but it was severely diminished in more than 75%. Immunoreactive-trypsin and C-peptide were directly correlated (r s=0.55, p〈0.01). This cross sectional study demonstrates, for the first time, that the Beta-cell loss in tropical-calcific-pancreatitis is related to the exocrine loss. It suggests that diabetes in tropical-calcific-pancreatitis is either secondary to pancreatitis or that a common factor(s) acts simultaneously on both components.
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Type of Medium: |
Electronic Resource
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URL: |