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Acute Pancreatitis

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Topic overview

Expert panel from Cincinnati Children's Pancreas Care Center discusses acute pancreatitis diagnosis and imaging in pediatric patients. Covers diagnostic criteria including lipase vs amylase interpretation, ultrasound as first-line imaging for biliary screening, and appropriate use of CT and MRCP for complications.

Key takeaways

  • Lipase is more specific than amylase for pancreatitis; amylase normalizes faster and can be elevated in appendicitis or salivary conditions.
  • Ultrasound is first-line imaging in pediatric acute pancreatitis to rule out gallstones and CBD dilation, not to confirm diagnosis.
  • CT is preferred for complicated pancreatitis to visualize necrosis, fluid collections, and hemorrhage; MRI/MRCP less useful acutely.
  • MRCP should be reserved for workup of ductal abnormalities after acute phase, as edema obscures ductal anatomy during acute attack.
  • Lipase has ~7-day half-life; patients presenting days after symptom onset may have normal amylase but elevated lipase.

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