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Acute Pancreatitis Pathogenesis and clininical implications. Peter Malfertheiner Department of Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Infectious Diseases Otto-von-Guericke-University Magdeburg. Acute Pancreatitis. Two clinical categories. - localized to the pancreas - rapid improvement
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Acute Pancreatitis Pathogenesis and clininical implications Peter Malfertheiner Department of Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Infectious Diseases Otto-von-Guericke-University Magdeburg
Acute Pancreatitis Two clinical categories - localized to the pancreas - rapid improvement - restitutio ad integrum Mild - local - cardiovascular - respiratory - renal - septic - metabolic - Defective healing Severe complications
Acute Pancreatitis Buechler MW, Uhl W, Malfertheiner P, Sarr MG. Diseases of the pancreas. Karger 2004. Mild form (edematous pancreatitis) 85% Severe form (necrotizing pancreatitis) 15% Sterile necrosis 60% Infected necrosis 40% Lethality < 1% Lethality 5% Lethality 10-20%
Acute Pancreatitis Pathophysiology • etiology • mechanisms of cell damage • translation of basic knowledge for prognostic assessment and drug development
Idiopathic Alcoholic Other Biliary Acute Pancreatitis Etiology • Autoimmune • Drug-induced • Iatrogenic • IBD-related • Infectious • Inherited • Metabolic • Neoplastic • Structural • Toxic • Traumatic • Vascular
Infectious disease and pathogens associated with acute pancreatitis Viral Mumps Viral hepatitis Coxsackie virus B Echovirus Cytomegalovirus (CMV) Varicella-zoster virus (VZV) Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) Herpes simples virus (HSV) Rabies Rubella virus Rotarius enteritis Bacterial Yersinia enterolcolica and Y.pseudotuberulosis Salmonella typhimurium and S. enteriditis Campylobacter jejuni Typhoid fever Tuberculosis Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare Leptosprosis Legionnaires´disease Connatal lues
Infectious disease and pathogens associated with acute pancreatitis Parasitis Ascaris lumbricoides Clonorchis senensis Fasciola hepatica Taenia saginata Giardia lamblia Echinococcus Pneumocystis carinii Toxoplasma gondii Fungal Candida Exophiala dermatitidis Cryptococcus neoformans Cryptosporidium Aspergillus
Classification of drugs published as causing acute pancreatitis Class I Alpha-methylopa 5-Aminosalicylate (ASA) Azathioprine Cimetidine Cytosine arabinoside Dexamethasone Ethinylestradiol/lynestrenol Furosemide Isoniazid 6-Mercaptopuride Metronidazole Norethindrone/mestranol Procainamide Pentamidine Stibogluconate Sulindac Sulfamenthazole Sulfamethoxazole Sulfasalazine Sulindac Tetracycline Trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole Valproic acid
Pathogenesis Etiologic factors Toxic factors (e.g. alcohol) 0bstructive factors (e.g. Gallstones) Intra-acinar triggering Intra-acinar triggering Intracellular enzyme activation Increases intraductal pressure with disruption of the duct barrier Interstitial enzyme activation Inflammation Enzyme activation Disruption of compartmentalization with colocalization ‚Autodigestion‘ Büchler,Uhl,Malfertheiner,Pancreatic diseases 2004l
Schematic representation of working hypothesis for the onset of acute pancreatitis Diet-induced Mouse Severe Secretagogue-induced Rat Mild Duct obstruction-induced Rat/rabbit Mild Duct obstruction-induced Opossum Severe Model Animal Severity Blockage of digestive enzyme secretion Redistribution of lysosomal hydrolases and colocalization with digestive enzyme zymogens Intra-acinar cell activation of digestive enzymes Acinar cell injury Pancreatitis
Acute Pancreatitis 3 phenotypic responses in early phase • changes in secretion • intracellular activation of proteases • induction of inflammatory responses
Pathophysiology (Acinar Cells) Lumen Triggering factor Physiologic enzyme synthesis and secretion 1= zymogen granules 2= hydrolsis Defense mechanisms against intracellular enzyme activation Intracellular injury resulting from enzyme activation (crinophagy)
Physiologic regulated apical exocytosis and pathologic basolateral exocytosis in pancreatitis SNARE proteins mediate exocytosis Gaisano and Gorelick, Gastroenterology 2009;136:2040-2044
Zymogen activation during acute pancreatitis Proposed compartments Possible role of Inflammatory cells and zymogen activation • Lysosomes/endosomes • Autophagic vacuoles • Secretory granules release factor(s) that stimulate zymogen activation in the acinar cell activate or degrade zymogens secreted basolaterally Gaisano and Gorelick., Gastroenterology 2009;136:2040-2044
Acute Pancreatitis Pathophysiology EARLY EVENTS • Trypsinogen autoactivation • Cleavage of trypsinogen to trypsin by cathepsin B • Intracellular pancreatic trypsin inhibitor decreased • loss of compartimentalisation of zymogens and lysosomal enzymes • Trypsinogen activation by calcium
Acinar lumen Cathepsin B activation Disruption in CA2+ signaling/ Trypsinogen autoactivation/ Inappropriate trypsinogen activation Zymogen activation Organelle rupture Cellular injury Cell death
Acute Pancreatitis Cell death • necrosis • apoptosis • autophagy
Cell death pathways Cell Stress Initiator caspases Lyosomes ER Mitochondria Calcium Effector caspases PARP Cathepsin B Cytochrome c ATP Effector caspases Trypsin Effector caspases PI3-kinase NF-B IAPs Necrosis Apoptosis
Acute Pancreatitis Pathophysiology The form of acinar cell death itself an important determinant of the severity of acute pancreatitis Bhatia M,Am J Physiol 2004 Induction of apoptosis reduces severity of experimental pancreatitis
Caspase-dependent and caspase-independent routes to cell death Maiuri et al, Molecular Cell Biology 2007;8:741-752
Autophagic process María I. Vaccaro, Pancreatology 2008;8:425-429
Autophagy, autodigestion and cell death are early cellular events in acute pancreatitis Acute pancreatitis Early cellular events Autophagy Autodigestion Cell death Necrosis Programmed cell death Cell survival María I. Vaccaro, Pancreatology 2008;8:425-429
Acute necrotizing pancreatitis Usually occurs within96h Ranson Apache 2 CRP>150
Pancreatic Necrosis h after onset of pain <24 46 70 24-<48 97 48-<72 72-<96 100 0 20 40 60 80 100% Development of pancreatic necrosis. After 96 h, all patients with necrotizing pancreatitis exhibit signs of necrosis (CRP, CT).
week 1 2 3 4 Pathophysiology of severe acute pancreatitis The two-phase-model Initial phase late phase SIRS Inflammation cascade Sepsis Infection of necrosis
Routes of Infection 1 = Hematatogenous; 2 = reflux of enteric content from the duodenum; 3 = reflux of bacteriobilia; 4 = lymphogenous (translocation); 5 = direct transperitoneal spread
Acute Pancreatitis: Pathophysiology Alcohol other agents gallstones Pancreatic cell-damage PMN-and Macrophages-Activation release activated enzymes endothelial damage PAF TNFa; IL1, 6, 8 PMN-Elastase, PLA2, O-Radicals CRP Tissue damage circulatory effects Activation of proteolytic cascade MOF
Acute Pancreatitis Pathophysiology • etiology • mechanisms of cell damage • translation from basic mechanisms to prognostic assessment and drug development
Acute Pancreatitis Biochemical markers • CRP • Serum Amyloid A • Procalcitonin • Interleukin1;6 • Trypsinogen activation peptide (TAP) • PMN elastase • Hematocrit
Acute Pancreatitis Pathophysiology- Conclusion • Unravelling the basic mechanisms in the early phase and during disease progression will help to develop approaches to block the damaging responses • Towards autophagy and apoptosis to prevent the more deleterious necrotic cell death (with recruitment of inflammatory cells) (?)
Acute Pancreatitis: Pathophysiology Alcohol other agents gallstones Pancreatic cell-damage PMN-and Macrophages-Activation release activated enzymes endothelial damage PAF TNFa; IL1, 6, 8 PMN-Elastase, PLA2, O-Radicals CRP Tissue damage circulatory effects Activation of proteolytic cascade MOF