Friess H, Shrikhande S, Shrikhande M, Martignoni M, Kulli C, Zimmermann A, Kappeler A, Ramesh H, Büchler M
Department of Visceral and Transplantation Surgery, University of Bern, Inselspital, Bern, Switzerland.
Gut. 2002 May;50(5):682-6. doi: 10.1136/gut.50.5.682.
Among various causes, nerve alterations and neuroimmune interactions have been suggested to participate in the generation of pain in chronic pancreatitis (CP). In this study, we compared neural changes and the pattern of perineural inflammatory cell infiltrates in three different aetiological forms of CP (alcoholic, idiopathic, and tropical) and evaluated whether differences exist between these groups.
A total of 35 patients with CP (12 tropical, 12 idiopathic, and 11 alcoholic) were included. Ten normal pancreatic tissues obtained from healthy organ donors served as controls. In all samples, the number of nerves, area of neural tissue, nerve size, and percentage of neural tissue and perineural inflammatory cell infiltrates were analysed histologically.
The median number of nerves per 10 mm2 tissue area was 2.3, 4.3, 4.4, and 2.6 in the normal pancreas, alcoholic CP, idiopathic CP, and tropical CP, respectively. Median area of neural tissue per 10 mm2 was 2550, 21 803, 18 595, and 24 666 microm2 in the normal pancreas, alcoholic CP, idiopathic CP, and tropical CP, respectively. Median nerve diameter was 36.85 microm in the normal pancreas, 80.6 microm in alcoholic CP, 68.95 microm in idiopathic CP, and 93.05 microm in tropical CP. In comparison with normal controls, all of these parameters were significantly increased except the number of nerves in tropical CP. For all parameters there were no significant differences between alcoholic, idiopathic, and tropical CP. When the degree of perineural inflammation was evaluated, no differences were observed among the three CP groups.
Independent of the underlying aetiology, CP is associated with an increase in neural tissue, and neural alterations occur in a similar fashion irrespective of the type of initiating event.
在多种病因中,神经改变和神经免疫相互作用被认为参与了慢性胰腺炎(CP)疼痛的产生。在本研究中,我们比较了三种不同病因形式的CP(酒精性、特发性和热带性)的神经变化及神经周围炎性细胞浸润模式,并评估这些组之间是否存在差异。
共纳入35例CP患者(12例热带性、12例特发性和11例酒精性)。从健康器官捐献者获取的10份正常胰腺组织作为对照。对所有样本进行组织学分析,统计神经数量、神经组织面积、神经大小以及神经组织和神经周围炎性细胞浸润的百分比。
每10平方毫米组织区域的神经中位数在正常胰腺、酒精性CP、特发性CP和热带性CP中分别为2.3、4.3、4.4和2.6。每10平方毫米神经组织的中位数面积在正常胰腺、酒精性CP、特发性CP和热带性CP中分别为2550、21803、18595和24666平方微米。正常胰腺的神经中位数直径为36.85微米,酒精性CP为80.6微米,特发性CP为68.95微米,热带性CP为93.05微米。与正常对照相比,除热带性CP的神经数量外,所有这些参数均显著增加。对于所有参数,酒精性、特发性和热带性CP之间无显著差异。评估神经周围炎症程度时,三个CP组之间未观察到差异。
无论潜在病因如何,CP均与神经组织增加有关,且无论起始事件类型如何,神经改变均以相似方式发生。