Abstract

An exponential expansion of medical knowledge has occurred within the past two generations of physicians, largely fueled by advances in technology, combined with dedicated adherence to the principles of evidence-based medicine. Indeed, the volume and quality of currently available medical information can be viewed as one of the more significant human achievements of the last 50 years. The pancreas and its associated conditions have been one of the principal beneficiaries of this information tsunami. Once considered to be the last frontier of organ pathophysiology, the enigmatic ‘‘piece of flesh’’ is increasingly surrendering its secrets to ever more comprehensive investigation. As a case in point, fluid collections resulting from acute pancreatitis were once thought to be quite rare. The late Dr. Robert M. Zollinger Sr., then dean of pancreatic surgeons, once told me that ‘‘The number of authors and articles about pancreatic pseudocysts far exceeds the actual incidence!’’ Moreover, the management of acute pancreatitisinduced fluid collections was problematic. For most of the 20th century, all peripancreatic fluid collections were considered to be ‘‘pseudocysts’’ treated by surgical drainage in order to prevent the excessive morbidity and mortality from complications such as rupture, hemorrhage, and infection. Nevertheless, the diagnosis of a ‘‘pancreatic pseudocyst’’ in the setting of acute pancreatitis was notoriously difficult at that time, being based primarily on the demonstration of an upper abdominal mass, often combined with anterior displacement of the stomach visualized radiographically with barium. Whether or not the mass was actually a pseudocyst, or was caused by the marked edema of the pancreas and surrounding tissues (so-called ‘‘pseudopseudocyst’’), could not be determined, and often necessitated exploratory laparotomy for definitive resolution. In the early 1970s, we discovered that transabdominal ultrasound was capable of reliably identifying pancreatic fluid collections as a complication of acute pancreatitis, thereby obviating the need for diagnostic laparotomy. Dynamic size changes in these collections, including complete resolution, were documented by serial sonographic studies [1]. Using this non-invasive modality, we set out to determine the natural history of acute pancreatitisinduced fluid collections in a series of prospective studies [2, 3]. In largely alcoholic populations admitted with severe acute pancreatitis and clinical findings suggestive of an acute pseudocyst, we found that 52 of 92 patients (56 %) exhibited the characteristic sonographic findings of a fluid collection in or near the pancreas. Surgical intervention for unrelated complications of acute pancreatitis was deemed necessary in 14 of these cases. Nonetheless, 40 % of the remaining cases underwent spontaneous resolution of the fluid collection within 3 weeks after the onset of pancreatitis. Accordingly, we concluded that conservative management of these early fluid collections was reasonable. Although the need for clinically-based definitions of the various types of fluid collections associated with acute pancreatitis had long been recognized as necessary for appropriate diagnosis and therapy, it was not until 1992 that precise clinical definitions of these fluid collections were proposed at the Atlanta Symposium [4], and subsequently adopted by the worldwide medical community. As a result of continuing investigations over the ensuing 20 years, however, two additional acute pancreatitis-induced fluid collections, ‘‘acute necrotic collections’’ (ANCs) and ‘‘walled-off necrosis’’ (WONs), have recently been recognized by an International Consensus [5], and added to the Atlanta E. L. Bradley III (&) Florida State University College of Medicine, 201 Cocoanut Avenue, Sarasota, FL 34236, USA e-mail: ed.bradley@med.fsu.edu

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