Pancreatic xanthomatous neuropathy associated with hyperlipidemia: a cause of abdominal pain mimicking chronic pancreatitis.
Märksõnad
Abstraktne
"Hyperlipidemic crisis" is a term used to describe episodic abdominal pain in patients with hyperlipidemia. The morphologic correlates of this phenomenon have not been investigated and the etiology of the disorder is uncertain. We report a unique histologic finding in the pancreas of a 34-year-old woman with a 17-year history of episodic abdominal pain, sometimes accompanied by hyperamylasemia. At the age of 18 years, grossly elevated cholesterol and triglyceride levels were documented and type V hyperlipidemia was diagnosed. At the age of 34 years, subtotal pancreatectomy was performed for intractable abdominal pain. Histologic examination identified an increased number of enlarged pancreatic nerves that were infiltrated by foamy macrophages and encircled by fibrous tissue; endoneurial infiltration with macrophages occasionally split nerves into individual fascicles. Otherwise, the pancreas had only minimal fibrosis, nesidioblastosis, mucinous metaplasia of some pancreatic ducts, and scattered small collections of chronic inflammatory cells, subtle features suggesting very mild chronic pancreatitis. We propose that this novel xanthomatous neuropathy mimicked pancreatitis and was one of the underlying pathophysiologic mechanisms of abdominal pain in this patient. Further studies are necessary to document the prevalence of this new entity in patients with hyperlipidemia and to correlate its occurrence with "hyperlipidemic crisis" in those individuals.