Conservative management in hypertriglyceridemia-associated pancreatitis.

Link to article at PubMed

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Conservative management in hypertriglyceridemia-associated pancreatitis.

J Intern Med. 2019 May 11;:

Authors: Berberich AJ, Ziada A, Zou GY, Hegele RA

Abstract
BACKGROUND: Severe hypertriglyceridemia (serum triglyceride >10 mmol/L) is implicated in ~9% of acute pancreatitis cases. Certain guidelines list severe hypertriglyceridemia as an indication for plasmapheresis.
OBJECTIVE: We assembled the natural trajectory of triglyceride levels in patients with acute pancreatitis due to severe hypertriglyceridemia who were managed conservatively without plasmapheresis to evaluate the effectiveness of this approach.
METHODS: A retrospective chart review was performed on 22 hospital admissions for acute pancreatitis episodes considered to be caused by severe hypertriglyceridemia. Patients were managed supportively, with cessation of oral intake (NPO) and intravenous hydration. Insulin infusion was used in 12 patients to manage concurrent hyperglycemia.
RESULTS: Triglyceride levels for the group were evaluated using a mixed effects model. The average triglyceride level fell from 45.4 mmol/L on presentation to 13.3 mmol/L within 48 hours, corresponding to a mean 69.8% decrease. Regression analysis showed a triglyceride half-life of 30.6 hours. Findings were similar for NPO-only and insulin infusion subgroups.
CONCLUSION: Patients with severe hypertriglyceridemia and acute pancreatitis can be conservatively managed safely and effectively without plasmapheresis. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

PMID: 31077464 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

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