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Acute Pancreatitis
Acute pancreatitis is a common cause of acute abdominal pain and hospital admission.
Most cases are mild, but some can deteriorate rapidly and become life-threatening.
This guide focuses on what doctors actually need to do on the ward and on-call.
What is acute pancreatitis?
Acute pancreatitis is inflammation of the pancreas, caused by premature activation of digestive enzymes within the gland.
In simple terms:
The pancreas starts digesting itself.
How does it present?
Typical features:
- Severe epigastric pain (often radiates to the back)
- Nausea and vomiting
- Abdominal tenderness
- Fever
- Tachycardia
Severe features:
- Hypotension
- Hypoxia
- Confusion
- Oliguria
These suggest severe pancreatitis and need urgent escalation.
Common causes (think practically)
The two most common causes:
- Gallstones
- Alcohol
Always consider:
- Recent binge drinking
- Biliary colic history
- Known gallstones
Other causes to remember:
- Hypertriglyceridaemia
- Drugs (e.g. azathioprine)
- ERCP-related
- Idiopathic
On the ward, always ask
Could this be gallstone-related?
Because gallstone pancreatitis often needs:
- MRCP
- ERCP
- Surgical input
This affects management.
First priority = assess severity early
Acute pancreatitis is not just pain.
Assess:
- NEWS score
- Oxygen requirement
- BP
- Urine output
- Mental state
- Bloods (urea, creatinine, CRP)
Worsening physiology = worsening pancreatitis.
Immediate management on the ward (what juniors should actually do)
If you are called to see a patient with suspected pancreatitis:
Do early:
- A–E assessment
- Bloods: FBC, U&E, LFTs, CRP, calcium, glucose
- Serum amylase (or lipase if available)
- VBG/ABG if unwell
- Strict fluid balance
- Catheter if unwell
Practical steps:
- Aggressive IV fluids (early)
- Strong analgesia
- Oxygen if needed
- Antiemetics
- Keep NBM initially
- Early senior review if unwell
Fluids are the most important early intervention.
Imaging (real-world practice)
- Ultrasound abdomen early (look for gallstones)
- CT abdomen usually not on day 1 unless diagnosis unclear or patient deteriorating
- CT typically done after 48–72 hours if severe or not improving
Don’t rush to CT in mild cases.
When to escalate
Escalate urgently if:
- Persistent tachycardia
- Hypotension
- Hypoxia
- Rising creatinine
- Reduced urine output
- Rising CRP
- NEWS ≥5
- Concerned nursing staff
These patients may need:
- HDU/ICU
- Gastro / surgical input
Common mistakes juniors make
- Underestimating severity
- Inadequate fluid resuscitation
- Delaying escalation
- Ordering CT too early
- Forgetting to look for gallstones
- Ignoring rising urea or creatinine
Take-home concept
Acute pancreatitis is not managed by amylase levels.
It is managed by recognising severity early, giving aggressive supportive care, and escalating appropriately.