DISEASES OF THE PANCREAS.

Obscure. Shown only by digestion or hepatic disorder. Excess of fat in stools suggests suppression of secretion. Intestinal fermentations. Suspension of glycogenesis and consequent emaciation, stunting or poisoning. Pancreatic calculus and icterus.

Diseases of the pancreas are even more obscure than those of the liver. Situated on the course of the duodenum, beneath the lumbar vertebræ and their right transverse processes, and separated from the lateral walls and floor of the abdomen by the great mass of the intestines, it is not open to manipulation or satisfactory percussion, and its secretions being used up in the function of digestion, so that they cannot be perceived and tested externally like the secretions of the kidneys. Beside the general constitutional disorder therefore, we must look rather to the derangements of the digestive functions, to the abnormal condition of the fæces, and to the alterations in subordinate functions like the glycogenic action of the liver, for indications of an unhealthy state of the pancreas. The suppression of the pancreatic secretion has long been associated with the occurrence of fat in the stools, yet this may result from the lack of bile which has important functions to fulfill in emulsionizing fat, and in securing its endosmosis. On the other hand the lack of pancreatic juice may hinder the complete digestion of the albuminoids, and favor their fermentation and the occurrence of tympanies, congestions, abnormal secretions, etc., which may be easily attributed to another origin. Then again the dependence of the liver on the pancreas for its stimulus to glycogenesis, would suggest a series of disturbances from the abundance of the unused food principles, from the hindrance to nutrition and growth, and perhaps from the toxic action of the hepatic products. Once more, through the common excretory duct, infection of the pancreas may extend to and involve the liver, and blocking of the common duct by pancreatic parasites, or calculi, may stop the flow of bile and cause jaundice or other icteric disorder. And yet, it is rarely the case that pancreatic disorder is successfully diagnosed, and it is too often only at the post mortem examination that the actual lesions are revealed.