Brief Articles
Copyright ©2010 Baishideng Publishing Group Co.
World J Gastrointest Endosc. Sep 16, 2010; 2(9): 308-313
Published online Sep 16, 2010. doi: 10.4253/wjge.v2.i9.308
Table 1 Indications for endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography in the 344 patients with acute pancreatitis according to the etiology of the disease1
Biliary acute pancreatitis (N = 320)
Non-biliary acute pancreatitis (N = 24)
Overall (N = 344)
nFrequencynFrequencynFrequency
Suspicion of common bile duct stones28989.41770.830689
Jaundice15347.8--15344.5
Clinical worsening of acute pancreatitis4514.1416.74914.2
Cholangitis216.6--216.1
Disruption of the main pancreatic duct--28.320.6
Suspicion of malignancy--14.210.3
Table 2 Distribution of different techniques used for biliary sphincterotomy according to the severity of the acute pancreatitis
Mild acute pancreatitis (N = 269)
Severe acute pancreatitis (N = 26)
P value
nFrequencynFrequency
Standard sphincterotomy21981.42388.50.531
Precut217.827.7
Standard sphincterotomy + Precut2910.813.8
Table 3 Number of cases and respective frequency of patients who underwent endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography in the two Italian surveys
Survey 1996-200021
Present survey 2001-2003
Overall population (N = 1005)Mild AP (n = 753)Severe AP (n = 252)Overall population (N = 1173)Mild AP (N = 1006)Severe AP (N = 167)
n / N (%)n / N (%)n / N (%)n / N (%)n / N (%)n/ N (%)
Interventional ERCP646/1005 (64.3%)482/753 (64.0%)164/252 (65.1%)344/1173 (29.3%)308/1006 (30.6%)36/167 (21.6%)
Interventional ERCP within 72 h293/646 (45.4%)227/482 (47.1%)66/164 (40.2%)89/344 (25.9%)69/308 (22.4%)20/36 (55.6%)