Assessment of the Amylase-Creatinine Clearance Ratio in Postoperative Patients
- 1 August 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Annals of Surgery
- Vol. 192 (2) , 195-198
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00000658-198008000-00011
Abstract
The value of the amylase-creatinine clearance ratio (ACCR) in the diagnosis of postoperative pancreatitis was prospectively assessed. In 77 patients undergoing operations known to have a significant incidence of postoperative pancreatitis (gastric, biliary or pancreatic) i.e. “high risk” group, the ACCR was abnormally elevated postoperatively in 36 patients (47%). However, overt clinical pancreatitis occurred in only eight patients (10%). In 60 other patients undergoing nonabdominal operations (orthopedic, head and neck, varicose vein surgery etc.) i.e. “low risk” group, the ACCR was abnormally elevated postoperatively in 23 patients (38%). No patient in this group developed clinical pancreatitis. We conclude, therefore, the ACCR is often abnormally elevated nonspecifically following any type of surgery, and cannot be used as evidence of postoperative pancreatitis. These data do suggest, however, that a normal ACCR, especially on successive daily determinations, might help to exclude the diagnosis of postoperative pancreatitis.This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Postoperative elevation of amylase/ creatinine clearance ratio in patients without pancreatitisGastroenterology, 1979
- Specificity of Increased Renal Clearance of Amylase in Diagnosis of Acute PancreatitisNew England Journal of Medicine, 1975
- The amylase-creatinine clearance ratio. Diagnostic parameter or physiologic phenomenon?1974
- Automated Reaction-Rate Method for Determination of Serum Creatinine with the CentrifiChemClinical Chemistry, 1971
- Serum Amylase and Lipase in the HumanAnnals of Surgery, 1961