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Are There Dietary Factors Affecting the Development of Pancreatitis in Patients With Gallstones?

I

Istanbul Training and Research Hospital

Status

Completed

Conditions

Gall Stone
Diet Habit
Pancreatitis

Treatments

Other: diet survey

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05142657
Pancreatitis diet

Details and patient eligibility

About

The most common cause of acute pancreatitis is gallstones. It is known that diet and obesity play a role in the formation of gallstones. It has been reported that the risk of gallstone formation is two times higher in obese individuals with a body mass index (BMI) >30 than in normal-weight individuals with a BMI between 20-25. The epidemiological literature on the relationship between diet and risk of acute pancreatitis is very limited. In addition, it is often unclear which type (acute, recurrent, or chronic) and subtype (gallstone-related or non-gallstone-related) of acute pancreatitis is studied in studies. Although there are studies in the literature evaluating the relationship between diet and development of gallstones or the development of pancreatitis with diet, studies examining the role of diet in the development of pancreatitis in patients with gallstones are very limited. In this study, we aimed to investigate the dietary differences in patients with gallstones who had pancreatitis and those who did not.

Full description

The incidence of acute pancreatitis has been reported as 4.9-35/100.000, and the incidence increases every year with the increase in obesity and gallstone rates. It is most commonly observed between the ages of 30-60 and no difference was found in terms of gender distribution. The most common cause of acute pancreatitis is gallstones. Alcohol use, drugs and other reasons come next.

It is known that diet and obesity play a role in the formation of gallstones. It has been reported that the risk of gallstone formation is two times higher in obese individuals with a body mass index (BMI) >30 than in normal-weight individuals with a BMI between 20-25. In addition, many studies have reported that increased use of dietary refined carbohydrates and triglycerides and reduced dietary fiber intake are associated with gallstone formation.

The epidemiological literature on the relationship between diet and risk of acute pancreatitis is very limited. In addition, it is often unclear which type (acute, recurrent, or chronic) and subtype (gallstone-related or non-gallstone-related) of acute pancreatitis is studied in studies. On the other hand, Sarles et al. In a comprehensive study conducted in 1973, he reported that high fat and protein consumption and alcoholism increase the risk of pancreatitis, regardless of etiology. Few case-control and ecological studies have evaluated the effect of protein, fat, and carbohydrate intakes on alcohol-related or gallstone-related acute pancreatitis risk or non-gallstone-related acute pancreatitis risk or acute pancreatitis mortality.

At the beginning of the twentieth century, an inverse relationship between coffee consumption and the risk of alcohol-induced acute pancreatitis was observed in a prospective study, and an inverse relationship with fruit consumption in two smaller case-control studies, and a positive association with consumption of freshwater fish and parboiled rice. In parallel, overly large meals and food allergies after a long period of fasting have been reported to be risk factors for acute pancreatitis.

Although there are studies in the literature evaluating the relationship between diet and development of gallstones or the development of pancreatitis with diet, studies examining the role of diet in the development of pancreatitis in patients with gallstones are very limited. In this study, we aimed to investigate the dietary differences in patients with gallstones who had pancreatitis and those who did not.

In the study, age, gender, body mass index, alcohol and cigarette consumption status, daily physical activity status, eating frequency, frequency of food consumption for three days, and their food consumption status will be evaluated with the BeBis 8 Full version program and it will be compared whether there is a difference between patients who had pancreatitis and those who did not. .

Enrollment

120 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 80 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion criteria in the pancreatitis group were :

  • 18-80 years of age,
  • having gallbladder stones
  • being diagnosed with pancreatitis, exclusion criteria in the pancreatitis group were:
  • having any cancer,
  • being pregnant,
  • having chronic liver or kidney disease,
  • icterus,
  • developing after ERCP.

Inclusion criteria in the control group were:

  • 18-80 years of age
  • gallbladder stones, exclusion criteria in the control group were:
  • any cancer,
  • pregnancy,
  • chronic liver or kidney disease,
  • icterus,
  • previous pancreatitis attack

Trial design

120 participants in 2 patient groups

Case
Description:
Patients who have gallstone pancreatitis
Treatment:
Other: diet survey
Control
Description:
Patients who have only gallstone
Treatment:
Other: diet survey

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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