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Pancreatitis

Medical Condition • Diagnosed with Ultrasound

Clinical Overview

Pancreatitis is inflammation of the pancreas, classified as acute or chronic. Acute pancreatitis most commonly results from gallstones (biliary pancreatitis) or alcohol use, and presents with severe epigastric pain, elevated serum lipase and amylase, nausea, and vomiting. Ultrasound is the first-line imaging for suspected acute pancreatitis and biliary etiology evaluation, assessing for gallstones, pancreatic enlargement, peripancreatic fluid collections, and pseudocyst formation. Chronic pancreatitis from recurrent inflammation leads to pancreatic parenchymal calcifications (visible as echogenic foci on ultrasound), ductal dilation (main pancreatic duct >3 mm), and ultimately exocrine and endocrine insufficiency.

Associated Anatomy: Pancreas
Signs & Symptoms: Severe epigastric pain, elevated lipase/amylase, nausea, vomiting, abdominal tenderness
ICD-10: K85

Related Conditions

Conditions frequently encountered alongside this one in clinical practice:

Appendicitis

Acute Cholecystitis

Gallstones

Hepatocellular Carcinoma

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Quick Reference

ICD-10  See condition post for code

Schema  MedicalCondition (schema.org)

Modality  Diagnostic Ultrasound

Ultrasound Specialties

Specialties that diagnose and assess this condition:

Abdominal Sonography

Cardiac Sonography

Vascular Sonography

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Certification Pathways

Credentials for sonographers who work with this condition:

RDMS — Registered Diagnostic Medical Sonographer

RDCS — Registered Diagnostic Cardiac Sonographer

RVT — Registered Vascular Technologist

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