This is a rare disease. It occurs most frequently in males during and after adult life, and the strumous diathesis appears to predispose to it. Intemperance, the suppression of normal or morbid discharges, and traumatism act as exciting causes.
ANATOMICAL APPEARANCES.—The pathological changes may be divided into two stages. In the first the gland is deep red in color, intensely injected with blood, greatly increased in consistence, enlarged to the extent of two or three times its normal size, and when an incision is made the divided lobules feel firm and crisp. The interlobular tissue is sometimes dotted with bloody points, and the same hemorrhagic changes may occur in the connective tissue surrounding the gland. In this stage resolution may occur or the inflammation may pass into suppuration. At the beginning of the second, or suppurative, stage numerous minute collections of pus are seen scattered throughout the gland in the interacinous tissue; these gradually collect into a single large abscess, and at times the whole gland is converted into a mere pus-sac, the capsule being much thickened. In other instances the formation of pus is entirely peripancreatic. The pus is usually inodorous and creamy, but is sometimes grayish-white or greenish in color; it then has a faint disagreeable odor, and occasionally is very fetid. When mixed with pancreatic juice it becomes clear and yellowish in color, and contains numerous minute curd-like masses.
In the first stage secondary peritonitis may arise from a simple extension of the inflammatory process, and bands of lymph are formed, gluing the pancreas to the neighboring organs. In the second, fatal acute peritonitis may result from the bursting of an abscess into the peritoneal cavity. These abscesses also occasionally open into the duodenum or stomach. Gangrene and peripancreatic sloughing occur very exceptionally, and are probably due to extensive hemorrhagic changes.
SYMPTOMS AND COURSE.—The disease may be preceded for an indefinite period by symptoms of impaired gastric or intestinal digestion, but its onset is usually sudden. The attack begins with colic or continuous deep-seated pain, starting in the epigastrium and extending toward the right shoulder or the back, and quickly becoming very intense. The pain is attended by pallor of the face, great restlessness, præcordial anxiety, dyspnoea, and faintness. The tongue is furred or dry and red; thirst is increased; the appetite is lost; there are frequent eructations, nausea, and constant vomiting of a clear, greenish, viscid fluid; the vomiting produces no sense of relief, and even increases the epigastric pain. The bowels are obstinately constipated. The epigastric region is tense, tumid, and excessively tender, so that it is usually impossible to elicit the physical signs of enlargement of the gland. There is moderate pyrexia, with evening exacerbations, and the pulse is increased in frequency. Jaundice does not occur.
These symptoms progressively increase in severity, and reach their maximum intensity in from three to five days. The pulse then becomes small, compressible, and irregular, the extremities cold, the face hippocratic, and death takes place in a state of collapse. The fatal termination is preceded by the symptoms of acute peritonitis in the cases which are complicated by an extension of inflammation or the rupture of an abscess into the peritoneal cavity.
Recovery is quite possible in the early stage of the disease. On the other hand, the course may be greatly protracted by a change in the type of the inflammation, resulting in induration and enlargement of the gland or in the formation of chronic abscesses. Again, when peritonitis from extension has been confined solely to the portion of the peritoneum that covers the gland, and has resulted in the formation of fibrinous bands binding the pancreas to the adjacent viscera, the symptoms of pancreatitis will on subsiding give place to those of obstruction of the stomach, duodenum, or bile-duct.
DIAGNOSIS.—The diseases most likely to be confounded with acute pancreatitis are biliary colic and the catarrhal form of acute gastritis.
From biliary colic it is distinguished by the absence of rigors, jaundice, enlargement of the liver, and a tender pyriform tumor corresponding in situation to the gall-bladder and due to its distension with accumulated bile. The pain in both affections is sudden in its onset, and very similar in character and distribution; but when caused by the passage of a gall-stone it usually begins either after a heavy meal or after some severe muscular exertion or shaking of the body—circumstances inoperative in the production of the pain of pancreatitis. The pain, too, in the former condition is less severe at first, increases gradually in severity, is more paroxysmal, is at the outset lessened by pressure, and is often temporarily relieved by the act of vomiting. The attacks at the same time are rarely isolated, and all doubt is removed when the pain ceases suddenly and a calculus is discovered in the feces.
Acute gastric catarrh is almost always traceable to the ingestion of some irritant substance, usually alcohol or food of bad quality. This history, together with the liability of the attack to occur during the course of chronic dyspepsia, the comparatively trifling severity of the pain, the headache, the irregularity of the bowels, the condition of the urine, which is either high-colored or deposits lithates abundantly, and the tendency of the affection to become chronic, are the points of distinction between this and the pancreatic disease.
Acute inflammation of the stomach, or gastritis proper, resulting from corrosive poisons, presents a train of symptoms entirely different from those of acute pancreatitis.