Pathogenesis and Management of Pancreatitis
A special issue of Journal of Clinical Medicine (ISSN 2077-0383). This special issue belongs to the section "Infectious Diseases".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (25 May 2019)
Special Issue Editor
Interests: molecular and cell biology of pancreatitis; diagnosis and treatment of pancreatitis; multiomics; clinical trials
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Advances in basic, translational and clinical research in acute and chronic pancreatitis place us on the cusp of a step change in understanding and patient management. Progress in the identification and characterization of molecular pathways, subcellular organelles, cellular and extracellular interactions, organ dysfunction, disease course and patient experience all contribute. Yet we have to continue striving for solutions to many challenges that will bring this step change about and make full use of the opportunities this presents. We still lack accurate biomarkers and effective therapies, particularly as we have no licensed specific therapy to protect the pancreas in acute pancreatitis or chronic pancreatitis. How are the mechanisms of acute pancreatitis similar or different from those of chronic pancreatitis? What will enable us to achieve earlier diagnosis of either condition? What can we learn about disease mechanisms that will clarify targets for treatment? What biomarkers can we pinpoint that will increase the accuracy of prognostication or evaluation of therapies? What can we learn from better study designs to map disease course and appreciate as well as improve patient experience? What are the next steps in developing new treatments? The Journal of Clinical Medicine is calling for original papers (the majority) and reviews that address these and other related important issues in pancreatitis, to be published in a special edition in mid-2019. You are invited to submit articles that report basic, translational and clinical studies in pancreatitis, to be evaluated with this special edition. Whether at the bench in the laboratory or office or at the bedside with patients, our focus is the same: greater insight and capability to understand and manage pancreatitis and so improve human health.
Prof. Dr. Robert Sutton
Guest Editor
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Keywords
- Acute pancreatitis
- Chronic pancreatitis
- Aetiology
- Acinar cell injury
- Ductal cell injury
- Inflammation
- Systemic injury
- Biomarkers
- Diagnosis
- Pancreatic insufficiency
- Treatment
- Quality of life
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