Devipriya S.’s scientific contributions

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Publications (1)


Figure 1: (A) Abdominal pain; (B) nausea and vomiting; (C) guarding; (D) acute fluid collection; (E) decreased urine output; (F) breathing difficulty.
Figure 2: Etiology.
Local complications.
Metabolic complications.
Organ involvement.

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Etiology, clinical profile and outcome of acute pancreatitis in a tertiary care teaching hospital in rural South India: a ten year retrospective study
  • Article
  • Full-text available

September 2019

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193 Reads

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12 Citations

International Surgery Journal

Ramu R.

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Vergis Paul

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Devipriya S.

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Nevil C. Philip

Background: Acute pancreatitis is a complex condition with diverse local and systemic complications, dealt by the surgeons all over the world. There were no previous detailed studies regarding the etiology, clinical profile and outcome of acute pancreatitis in rural Kerala.Methods: This is a hospital based study by retrospective chart analysis of all acute pancreatitis cases from the past 10 years in this tertiary care centre which have clinical/ laboratory/ radiological findings suggestive of acute pancreatitis.Results: Among 436 cases studied 318 (72.9%) were males and 118 (27.1%) were females. Epigastric pain without radiation to the back (51.6%) was the most common clinical presentation. Alcohol was the most common etiological factor seen in 42.4% followed by idiopathic pancreatitis (IP) (36.9% cases) and then by gallstone/biliary pancreatitis (14.5%). Acute fluid collection was the most common local complication seen in 29.1% cases and respiratory system involvement was the most common organ involvement seen in 16.5% of cases.Conclusions: Epigastric pain without radiation to the back was the most common clinical presentation. Incidence of alcoholic pancreatitis (42.4%) and idiopathic pancreatitis (36.9%) was slightly higher in our study, which should prompt us to look with further studies for identifiable new aetiologies in the idiopathic group. This work provides the first known regional description of the etiology, clinical profile and outcome of acute pancreatitis. Due to institutional and population similarities, this may represent the status of developing countries in general. This will help in formulating a hospital policy which would be beneficial.

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Citations (1)


... Necrotic collections, such as WON, were observed in 12% of patients, while acute necrotic collections were seen in 44%. This is comparable to the studies done by Ramu et al. 9 and Akhter et al. 10 where acute fluid collections were the most common pancreatic complications (29.1% and 41% respectively).Extra-pancreatic complications like pleural effusion was seen in 62% cases, ascites (84%), necrosis (40%), sepsis (16%), and multi-organ dysfunction (20%).In three cases, hepatic and splenic pseudocysts were seen. In our study, the mean hospital stay was 15.1 days. ...

Reference:

Role of multidetector computed tomography in imaging of fluid collections in acute pancreatitis and its correlation with clinical prognosis in accordance with revised atlanta classification
Etiology, clinical profile and outcome of acute pancreatitis in a tertiary care teaching hospital in rural South India: a ten year retrospective study

International Surgery Journal