Experimental Pancreatitis in Pigs
- 1 December 1971
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of Surgery
- Vol. 103 (6) , 720-723
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archsurg.1971.01350120084015
Abstract
Unlike dog preparations, high pressure injection of bile and bile salt (taurocholate) does not cause immediate fatal pancreatitis in pigs. Bile salt does induce pseudocyst formation, pancreatic suppuration, septicemia, and azotemia in pigs. Pancreatic infusion of trypsin is also sublethal in pigs, but the combination of trypsin and bile salts at physiologic injection pressures produces a high mortality from acute hemorrhagic pancreatitis.Keywords
This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- Pancreatic ductal mucosa as a protective barrier in the pathogenesis of pancreatitisThe American Journal of Surgery, 1969
- Relationship of Azotemia and Survival in Bile Pancreatitis in the DogArchives of Surgery, 1966
- Pathogenesis of nitrogen retention in pancreatitisThe American Journal of Surgery, 1965
- EXPERIMENTAL PANCREATITIS—RECENT CONTRIBUTIONSJAMA, 1959
- Alterations in the Pancreatic Resistance to Bile in the Pathogenesis of Acute PancreatitisAnnals of Surgery, 1957
- Chirurgie des PancreasJAMA, 1950
- THE BILE FACTOR IN PANCREATITISArchives of Surgery, 1923