MacLaren I F
Royal Infirmary, Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom.
World J Surg. 1990 Jan-Feb;14(1):19-27. doi: 10.1007/BF01670540.
Chronic pancreatitis was a recognized clinical entity in the British Isles at the beginning of the twentieth century, but until little more than 30 years ago, it was considered to be a rare condition and received scant attention from British surgeons. During the second half of the twentieth century, the incidence of the disease in the British Isles has increased significantly and alcohol abuse has become, by far, the most important etiological factor. Per capita consumption of alcohol in the British Isles has increased very markedly in the past 30 years and alcohol abuse is becoming a major social problem, but, although chronic pancreatitis is more common now than it was 30 years ago, the increase in its incidence is a good deal less than might be expected. British surgeons are agreed that intractable pain is the cardinal indication for surgical intervention in chronic pancreatitis and success depends on selection of the operative procedure most appropriate to the pathological state of the pancreas and, in particular, of its ductal system. In recent years, British surgeons in highly specialized units have become more radical in their approach to the treatment of chronic pancreatitis with total pancreatectomy in selected patients currently being advised more frequently than in previous decades.