Urgent Care RAP
This free iTunes segment is just one tiny snippet of the fully-loaded 3-hour monthly Urgent Care RAP show. Earn CME on your commute while getting the latest practice-changing urgent care information: journal article breakdowns, evidence-based topic reviews, critical guideline updates, conversations with experts, and so much more. Sign up for the full show at hippoed.com/UCRAPPOD [http://hippoed.com/UCRAPPOD] Matthieu DeClerck, MD, Mike Weinstock, MD, and Cameron Berg, MD sit down to discuss the diagnostic criteria for acute pancreatitis. They discuss workup: the role of imaging to rule out gallstone pancreatitis. They go into risk stratification of acute pancreatitis as well as Initial management: pain control, IV fluids, nutrition. And ultimate disposition – when to go home? When to admit to a higher level of care? Pearls: * Confirmatory CT scanning is rarely needed to confirm pancreatitis * Amylase level is neither as sensitive or specific as lipase. * Early feeding, has been shown to improve outcomes in patients with pancreatitis. DIAGNOSING PANCREATITIS * Must meet 2 of the following 3 criteria: * * Clinical presentation that is consistent with pancreatitis - epigastric or upper abdominal pain, frequently radiating to the back often with associated with nausea and vomiting, * A lipase level that is three times the upper lab limit of normal for a given assay. * * Do not order an amylase as it not as sensitive or specific for pancreatitis as lipase. * The initial lipase level cannot predict outcomes of patients with pancreatitis and there's no utility in trending lipase levels * A CT scan demonstrating pancreatic inflammation consistent with pancreatitis. * * Note: A CT is rarely needed to confirm pancreatitis but it is the gold standard when there is diagnostic uncertainty. * Perform a RUQ ultrasound to rule out gallstone pancreatitis as the most common cause of pancreatitis in the United States is biliary. * * Patients with biliary tract obstruction will need an ERCP or MRCP urgently that many facilities cannot get 24/7. * Obtain a triglyceride level as hypertriglyceridemia is the third most common cause of pancreatitis after alcohol and gallstones. MANAGEMENT * Not all patients with acute pancreatitis require hospital stay. * Consider the following factors before deciding on admission: * * Patient vital signs * Clinical appearance * Ability to perform ADLs * Presences or absence of markers of end organ stability * Patients with pancreatitis who are admitted should receive adequate fluid resuscitation in the form of 2-3L of IV crystalloid. * Feed the patient orally as soon as possible as early enteral nutrition, rather than bowel rest, has been shown to greatly increase recovery. * Patients with gallstone pancreatitis and pancreatitis secondary to hypertriglyceridemia require a higher level of care and should be referred appropriately. REFERENCES: 1. Uhl, W. et al. 2003. IAP Guidelines for the surgical management of acute pancreatitis. Pancreatology. 2. Tenner, S. 2013. American College of Gastroenterology Guidelines: Management of Pancreatitis. The American Journal of Gastroenterology.
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