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Review
. 1988 May-Jun;14(3):299-312.

[Diabetogenic tropical pancreatitis]

[Article in French]
Affiliations
  • PMID: 3044866
Review

[Diabetogenic tropical pancreatitis]

[Article in French]
R Assan et al. Diabete Metab. 1988 May-Jun.

Abstract

The tropical calcifying pancreatitis and/or fibrous pancreatitis are responsible for a number of cases of juvenile insulin-dependent diabetes in the Third World countries. World wide distributed in the tropical areas of Asia, Africa and South America, they can also be observed in Europe, in migrants from these countries. Intensive epidemiological and biochemical studies are currently developed in order to shed light on the many obscure points. Classification of the typical calcifying pancreatitis and the related syndromes is a matter of debate. The pathological basis is calcification of the pancreas and echography of the gland may become a cheap convenient relatively specific tool for epidemiology. The clinical syndrome consists of chronic painful pancreatic episodes since childhood, associated with pancreatic exocrine insufficiency, followed by the onset, during adolescence, of diabetes mellitus, which is most of the times insulin dependent. Patients' history is free of chronic alcoholism, but includes constantly chronic caloric and proteic malnutrition. Although insulin dependent this diabetes in not prone to ketosis, due presumably to carnitine deficiency and relative glucagon deficiency (or suppressibility). Insulin resistance is traditionally noted, the pathophysiology of which is unknown. The mechanism of calcification appearance is also undetermined. Either a deficiency in pancreatic stone protein, or the toxic effect of cyanogen glucosides present in cassava and other tropical foodstuffs, or the malnutrition-related deficiency in sulphur-containing aminoacids may be causal factors. No valid experimental model of the disease is available.

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