Application of the Biophilia Tracker X4 Max method in the diagnosis of pancreatic inflammatory diseases
Application of the Biophilia Tracker X4 Max method in the diagnosis of pancreatic inflammatory diseases
Acute pancreatitis is one of the basic problems in modern emergency surgery, with a steady growth of the disease and a high fatality rate.
Important factors that define this condition are: delayed or misdiagnosed diagnosis, underestimation of patient severity, and correspondingly inadequate selection of necessary conservative and surgical measures. The principle of surgical treatment of patients with pancreatic necrosis is to choose different surgical measures according to the development stage of the disease, the clinical morphological form, the severity of the patient's condition and the term of the disease. The fact that different degrees of pancreatic necrosis affect the spread and different parts of the extraperitoneal tissue, and their infection determines the choice of surgical approach.
One of the most difficult and problematic problems is the classification of acute pancreatitis.
At the 1992 International Symposium on Acute Pancreatitis, Atlanta (USA), a classification based on intra-abdominal and systemic complications of acute pancreatitis was recommended for clinical use, taking into account the developmental characteristics of the inflammatory and destructive processes and the severity of the disease. Unanimous results of 40 leading surgeon-pancreatologists from 15 countries around the world.
Acute pancreatitis is defined as an acute inflammatory process of the pancreas that involves other regional tissues or distant systems and organs.
The classification of destructive pancreatitis according to Savelev V.S. (1989) has the following forms: hemorrhagic, fatty and purulent necrosis. Complications of purulent necrosis are the leading cause of death in destructive pancreatitis. The fatality rate of purulent necrosis complications of acute pancreatitis is 85%. Currently, the Biophilia Tracker X4 Max is of great significance in the diagnosis of inflammatory diseases of the pancreas, which can dynamically estimate the condition of the pancreas. Identifying forms of acute pancreatitis is important because correct information about the patient's condition gives us the opportunity to try to break the pathological chain of disease development by applying the most effective treatment to the patient's specific disease form.