Acute pancreatitis is Pancreas inflamatory process that should be suspected in patients with severe acute abdominal pain in the upper quadrants, mainly in the epigastrium. However, to diagnose it, laboratory and imaging studies are necessary and two of the following criteria are required: abdominal pain consistent with the disease, serum amylase or lipase elevated more than three times the upper limit of normal and strongly suggestive images (US, CT, MRI). Up to 10-20% of cases of severe pancreatitis will develop necrosis of the gland and its peripheral tissues, generating a slow and torpid evolution with tendency to clinical deterioration, carrying the patient to mortality of up to 20-40% when associated with infection. In these cases, an invasive approach is mandatory in order to extract the fluid from inside the collection and/or necrotic tissue. Minimally invasive techniques such as percutaneous or endoscopic drainage, endoscopic necrosectomy, and video-assisted pancreatic necrosectomy (VARD) have been proposed, due to the high rate of morbidity and mortality that open necrosectomy carries; however, it is still used when minimally invasive management does not solves the problem. In this article we present the case of a 56-year-old patient with moderate acute pancreatitis of biliary origin, complicated by infected pancreatic necrosis, being managed with VARD, presenting an adequate postoperative evolution.
Published in | Journal of Surgery (Volume 10, Issue 5) |
DOI | 10.11648/j.js.20221005.11 |
Page(s) | 144-148 |
Creative Commons |
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited. |
Copyright |
Copyright © The Author(s), 2022. Published by Science Publishing Group |
Acute Pancreatitis, Pancreatic Necrosis, Percutaneous Drainage, Necrosectomy, VARD, Minimally Invasive, Peripancreatic Collections
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APA Style
Gustavo Adolfo Guerrero Martínez, Luis Gerardo Aguilera Muñoz, Maryel Sánchez Olvera. (2022). Walled-off Pancreatic Necrosis Treated with Video-Assisted Retroperitoneal Debridement (VARD). Journal of Surgery, 10(5), 144-148. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.js.20221005.11
ACS Style
Gustavo Adolfo Guerrero Martínez; Luis Gerardo Aguilera Muñoz; Maryel Sánchez Olvera. Walled-off Pancreatic Necrosis Treated with Video-Assisted Retroperitoneal Debridement (VARD). J. Surg. 2022, 10(5), 144-148. doi: 10.11648/j.js.20221005.11
@article{10.11648/j.js.20221005.11, author = {Gustavo Adolfo Guerrero Martínez and Luis Gerardo Aguilera Muñoz and Maryel Sánchez Olvera}, title = {Walled-off Pancreatic Necrosis Treated with Video-Assisted Retroperitoneal Debridement (VARD)}, journal = {Journal of Surgery}, volume = {10}, number = {5}, pages = {144-148}, doi = {10.11648/j.js.20221005.11}, url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.js.20221005.11}, eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.js.20221005.11}, abstract = {Acute pancreatitis is Pancreas inflamatory process that should be suspected in patients with severe acute abdominal pain in the upper quadrants, mainly in the epigastrium. However, to diagnose it, laboratory and imaging studies are necessary and two of the following criteria are required: abdominal pain consistent with the disease, serum amylase or lipase elevated more than three times the upper limit of normal and strongly suggestive images (US, CT, MRI). Up to 10-20% of cases of severe pancreatitis will develop necrosis of the gland and its peripheral tissues, generating a slow and torpid evolution with tendency to clinical deterioration, carrying the patient to mortality of up to 20-40% when associated with infection. In these cases, an invasive approach is mandatory in order to extract the fluid from inside the collection and/or necrotic tissue. Minimally invasive techniques such as percutaneous or endoscopic drainage, endoscopic necrosectomy, and video-assisted pancreatic necrosectomy (VARD) have been proposed, due to the high rate of morbidity and mortality that open necrosectomy carries; however, it is still used when minimally invasive management does not solves the problem. In this article we present the case of a 56-year-old patient with moderate acute pancreatitis of biliary origin, complicated by infected pancreatic necrosis, being managed with VARD, presenting an adequate postoperative evolution.}, year = {2022} }
TY - JOUR T1 - Walled-off Pancreatic Necrosis Treated with Video-Assisted Retroperitoneal Debridement (VARD) AU - Gustavo Adolfo Guerrero Martínez AU - Luis Gerardo Aguilera Muñoz AU - Maryel Sánchez Olvera Y1 - 2022/09/29 PY - 2022 N1 - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.js.20221005.11 DO - 10.11648/j.js.20221005.11 T2 - Journal of Surgery JF - Journal of Surgery JO - Journal of Surgery SP - 144 EP - 148 PB - Science Publishing Group SN - 2330-0930 UR - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.js.20221005.11 AB - Acute pancreatitis is Pancreas inflamatory process that should be suspected in patients with severe acute abdominal pain in the upper quadrants, mainly in the epigastrium. However, to diagnose it, laboratory and imaging studies are necessary and two of the following criteria are required: abdominal pain consistent with the disease, serum amylase or lipase elevated more than three times the upper limit of normal and strongly suggestive images (US, CT, MRI). Up to 10-20% of cases of severe pancreatitis will develop necrosis of the gland and its peripheral tissues, generating a slow and torpid evolution with tendency to clinical deterioration, carrying the patient to mortality of up to 20-40% when associated with infection. In these cases, an invasive approach is mandatory in order to extract the fluid from inside the collection and/or necrotic tissue. Minimally invasive techniques such as percutaneous or endoscopic drainage, endoscopic necrosectomy, and video-assisted pancreatic necrosectomy (VARD) have been proposed, due to the high rate of morbidity and mortality that open necrosectomy carries; however, it is still used when minimally invasive management does not solves the problem. In this article we present the case of a 56-year-old patient with moderate acute pancreatitis of biliary origin, complicated by infected pancreatic necrosis, being managed with VARD, presenting an adequate postoperative evolution. VL - 10 IS - 5 ER -