Acute pancreatitis is inflammation of the pancreas, ranging from mild self-limiting disease to severe, life-threatening necrotising pancreatitis with multi-organ failure. Mortality in severe disease reaches 20–30%.
Common Causes — GET SMASHED
Mnemonic
Cause
G
Gallstones (35–40% — most common in GCC women)
E
Ethanol/alcohol (30% in Western countries; lower in GCC due to alcohol restrictions)
In GCC: Gallstone pancreatitis is the most common cause — high-fat diets, obesity and high gallstone prevalence in GCC females. Hypertriglyceridaemia pancreatitis is increasing with metabolic syndrome epidemic.
Revised Atlanta Classification
Severity
Criteria
Mortality
Mild
No organ failure, no local/systemic complications
<1%
Moderately severe
Transient organ failure (<48 hrs) and/or local complications
8%
Severe
Persistent organ failure (>48 hrs) — respiratory, renal or cardiovascular
36–50%
Severity Scoring
Ranson Criteria
Assessed at admission (5 criteria) and at 48 hours (6 criteria). Score ≥3 = severe pancreatitis.
Score ≥3 → high mortality risk; ICU admission warranted.
CT Severity Index (Balthazar Score)
CT Grade
Description
Points
A
Normal pancreas
0
B
Pancreatic oedema
1
C
Peripancreatic inflammatory change
2
D
Single fluid collection
3
E
Multiple fluid collections or gas in/near pancreas
4
+ Necrosis score (0–4 points based on % pancreatic necrosis). CTSI = grade + necrosis. Score ≥7 = 17× higher morbidity and mortality.
Treatment
Fluid Resuscitation — Most Critical Intervention
Aggressive early fluid resuscitation is the most important treatment in acute pancreatitis. Reduces pancreatic necrosis by maintaining microvascular perfusion.
First-line fluid: Lactated Ringer's (Hartmann's) — superior to 0.9% NaCl; reduces SIRS response; avoid in hypercalcaemia
Rate: 250–500 mL/hr initial bolus, then 250 mL/hr for first 12–24 hrs; titrate to response
<6 cm: conservative; >6 cm or symptomatic: endoscopic or surgical drainage
ARDS
Days 1–4
Lung-protective ventilation, prone positioning if refractory
Acute kidney injury
Early
Aggressive hydration, avoid nephrotoxins, renal replacement therapy if severe
Hypocalcaemia
Days 2–5
IV calcium gluconate; monitor ECG for prolonged QT
Hyperglycaemia
Throughout
Insulin infusion; target BGL 6–10 mmol/L in ICU
Coagulopathy/DIC
Severe cases
FFP, cryoprecipitate, platelets per TEG/ROTEM
Nutritional Support
Paradigm shift: Early enteral nutrition (within 24–48 hrs) is now recommended over traditional "nil by mouth" approach. Enteral feeding maintains gut barrier, reduces bacterial translocation and improves outcomes.
Feeding Strategy
Severity
Route
Timing
Mild AP
Oral diet — soft, low-fat as soon as tolerated
Resume oral feeding within 24–48 hrs if pain improving
Moderate-severe AP
Nasojejunal (NJ) tube feeding preferred; NG acceptable if NJ not available
Start within 24–48 hrs of admission
Severe AP with ileus
Parenteral nutrition (TPN) as bridge if enteral not tolerated within 72 hrs
TPN if EN failed after 5–7 days
Nasojejunal vs nasogastric: NJ tube bypasses stomach and pancreatic stimulation — preferred. NG acceptable if NJ not available as studies show equivalent outcomes in most cases. Confirm NJ position by X-ray.
Nursing Enteral Feeding Considerations
Gastric residual volume (GRV) monitoring: hold feed if GRV >500 mL; document and escalate
Anti-emetics: ondansetron, metoclopramide for nausea during feeding
Feed rate: start at 20–25 mL/hr; titrate up to target every 4–6 hrs if tolerated
Hypertriglyceridaemia pancreatitis: Markedly increased in GCC due to metabolic syndrome, type 2 diabetes, obesity and high-fat diet. TG >1000 mg/dL causes direct pancreatic toxic injury. Management includes insulin infusion (activates lipoprotein lipase), heparin, and plasmapheresis in refractory cases. Fibrates and omega-3 fatty acids for secondary prevention
Gallstone pancreatitis in GCC women: High-parity GCC women have elevated gallstone risk — gallstones are the most common pancreatitis cause in GCC females. ERCP with sphincterotomy and cholecystectomy within same admission
Ramadan fasting and re-feeding: Sudden high-fat iftars after prolonged fasting may precipitate gallstone sludge and biliary pancreatitis — seasonal clustering reported in GCC EDs during Ramadan
GLP-1 agonists: Increasingly prescribed for diabetes/obesity in GCC (semaglutide, liraglutide) — class-associated pancreatitis risk; monitor serum amylase/lipase in symptomatic patients on GLP-1 agents
Exam Tips
Ranson score ≥3 = severe. Know the 11 Ranson criteria (5 at admission + 6 at 48 hrs)
Most common cause in GCC: gallstones
First-line fluid: Lactated Ringer's (Hartmann's) — superior to 0.9% NaCl
Early enteral nutrition within 24–48 hrs — NOT prolonged NBM
Hypocalcaemia in pancreatitis = calcium saponification in fat necrosis (fat necrosis consumes calcium)
Infected necrosis = antibiotics (imipenem/meropenem); do NOT routinely give prophylactic antibiotics in sterile necrosis
Morphine is SAFE for pain in pancreatitis — old teaching was incorrect
Exam MCQs — DHA / SCFHS / QCHP
Q1. A patient with acute pancreatitis has serum calcium of 1.7 mmol/L. What is the MOST LIKELY pathophysiological mechanism?
✅ B — Hypocalcaemia in acute pancreatitis results from calcium saponification — liberated free fatty acids from fat necrosis bind calcium ions, sequestering them as calcium soaps in necrotic fat tissue. This is a marker of severe disease and a Ranson criterion at 48 hours (Ca <2.0 mmol/L).
Q2. A patient with severe acute pancreatitis is to be started on nutritional support. What is the PREFERRED route based on current evidence?
✅ C — Current evidence (ESPEN, ACG guidelines) strongly recommends early enteral nutrition via nasojejunal tube within 24–48 hours. Enteral nutrition maintains gut mucosal integrity, prevents bacterial translocation from the gut to the pancreatic necrosis, and is superior to TPN. "Rest the pancreas" with prolonged NBM is an outdated concept.
Q3. A patient with acute pancreatitis has the following on admission: age 62, WBC 18 × 10⁹/L, blood glucose 13 mmol/L (non-diabetic), AST 310 U/L, LDH 380 U/L. At 48 hours: Hct dropped 12%, BUN risen 2.1 mmol/L, Ca 1.85 mmol/L, PaO₂ 7.2 kPa. What is the Ranson score?
✅ D — 9 (All 5 admission criteria: age >55, WBC >16, glucose >11.1, AST >250, LDH >350 = 5 points. Plus 48-hr: Hct drop >10% + BUN rise >1.8 + Ca <2.0 + PaO₂ <8 kPa = 4 more points = 9 total). Score >6 predicted nearly 100% mortality historically. Patient requires ICU admission.
Q4. A patient with acute pancreatitis develops fever, worsening abdominal pain and rising WBC 5 days into admission. CT shows gas within a pancreatic necrotic collection. What does this finding indicate and what is the treatment?
✅ C — Gas within a pancreatic necrotic collection = infected pancreatic necrosis (pathognomonic). This is a life-threatening complication requiring: IV carbapenem antibiotics (imipenem or meropenem — good pancreatic penetration), CT/endoscopic guided drainage (step-up approach: percutaneous → endoscopic → surgical necrosectomy if needed). Mortality is high without intervention.