Monday, November 23, 2009

Zinc Status in Chronic Pancreatitis and its Relationship with Exocrine and Endocrine Insufficiency


By Prof. Girish B.N.

JOP. J Pancreas (Online) 2009 Nov 5; 10(6):651-656.



Banavara Narasimhamurthy Girish2, Gopalakrishna Rajesh1, Kannan Vaidyanathan3, Vallath Balakrishnan1


Departments of 1Gastroenterology, 2Physiology, and 3Biochemistry; Amrita Institute of Medical Sciences. Cochin, Kerala, India

ABSTRACT

Context A major role of the pancreas in zinc homeostasis has been suggested.

Objective To assess erythrocyte zinc status in chronic pancreatitis and to correlate it with pancreatic exocrine and endocrine insufficiency.

Patients One hundred and one patients with chronic pancreatitis (34 alcoholic chronic pancreatitis, 67 tropical chronic pancreatitis) were prospectively studied.

Main outcome measure Disease characteristics and imaging features were recorded. Erythrocyte zinc was estimated by flame atomic absorption spectrophotometry. Exocrine insufficiency was assessed using polyclonal antibody ELISA for pancreatic stool elastase1. Endocrine insufficiency was assessed by serum glucose levels and insulin requirement.

Results Erythrocyte zinc was significantly lower in chronic pancreatitis patients than in the controls (26.5±9.5 µg/g Hb vs. 38.0±6.6 µg/g Hb; P<0.001), and in tropical chronic pancreatitis than in alcoholic chronic pancreatitis (25.0±10.4 µg/g Hb vs. 29.6±6.5 µg/g Hb, P=0.001). In chronic pancreatitis patients who had exocrine insufficiency, erythrocyte zinc positively correlated with stool elastase1 (r=0.587, P<0.001). Erythrocyte zinc levels were significantly lower in diabetic patients as compared to non-diabetics (P=0.036).

Conclusions This study demonstrates zinc deficiency in chronic pancreatitis patients, and that zinc deficiency correlates with exocrine and endocrine insufficiency. Further studies may clarify the possible benefits of zinc supplementation in chronic pancreatitis.

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Diabetes Education & Management



Diabetes can strike anyone, from any walk of life.

And it does – in numbers that are dramatically increasing. In the last decade, the cases of people with diabetes jumped more than 40 percent – to almost 24 million Americans.

Worldwide, it afflicts 180 million people. And the World Health Organization estimates that by 2030, that number will more than double.

Today, diabetes takes more lives than AIDS and breast cancer combined -- claiming the life of 1 American every 3 minutes. It is a leading cause of blindness, kidney failure, amputations, heart failure and stroke.

The disease places an enormous emotional, physical and financial burden on the entire family. Annually, diabetes costs the American public more than $218 billion.

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