Abstract
From a computerized database comprising 28 pertinent items in each of a consecutive series of 664 patients with cholelithiasis, differences were studied between men and women. In 52 patients there was a documented attack of acute pancreatitis (7.8%). Twenty-five of 174 men had pancreatitis, compared with 27 of 490 women (p less than 0.0001). Men developed gallstones later in life than women, but suffered gallstone pancreatitis earlier in life and in the course of their gallstone-related disease. A history of flatulent dyspepsia, chronic cholecystitis, and biliary colic was less common in men than in women with pancreatitis (p less than 0.0001). Men with pancreatitis had fewer stones in their gallbladders than did women (p = 0.0002). The cystic duct and the common bile duct in the pancreatitic patient were more likely to be dilated (p less than 0.0001). In the nonpancreatic group, these ducts were larger in men. Pancreatic duct reflux on operative cholangiography was more common both in patients with pancreatitis 62% cf 14% (p less than 0.0001), and in men (p less than 0.001). Predisposition to pancreatitis relates to duct size rather than stone size per se. Men are more susceptible to gallstone migration at an early stage of their disease. In addition they have a larger diameter duct system and possibly a different anatomic disposition of the sphincter of Oddi, which predisposes them to a higher incidence of pancreatitis than women. The data suggest that it is cystic duct size that is critical in the pathogenesis of gallstone pancreatitis.
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Selected References
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