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Journal of Gastrointestinal & Digestive System | ISSN: 2161-069X | Volume: 8

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October 29-30, 2018 | San Francisco, USA

International Conference on

Gastrointestinal Cancer and Therapeutics

4

th

World Congress on

Digestive & Metabolic Diseases

26

th

Annual Congress on

Cancer Science and Targeted Therapies

Surgery for acute pancreatitis: Principles and practice

A

cute pancreatitis is the most common pancreatic pathology encountered in India. Majority of them are caused by ethanol

consumption while biliary etiology accounts for the rest. Young alcoholic males and middle-aged obese females are usually

affected. Another cause, peculiar to the Tropics, is the chronic calcific pancreatitis with acute exacerbations. This population

usually consists of boys and girls in their teens. In most situations, acute pancreatitis is a mild and self-limiting disorder.

Initial care depends on aggressive fluid management and pain control. This usually happens in the first 3-4 days of the illness

where the patient will be managed in a community health setting. However, in a tertiary referral center, the majority of acute

pancreatitis patients have a complicated course which necessitates surgical management. Radiologically, patients with severe

acute pancreatitis have fluid collections around the pancreas along with variable degrees of necrosis of the gland. Understanding

the nature of the fluid collection and the extent of necrosis in conjunction with the clinical condition of the patient helps in

accurate management. As a teaching hospital, our surgical unit treats more than 300 patients with acute pancreatitis every year.

This talk will focus on the scientific principles that guide the surgical management of acute pancreatitis patients.

Biography

Madhusudhanan Jegadeesan had completed his training in General Surgery in 2008 and passed out with Dr TMA Pai Gold Medal from one of the most reputed

Institutions in India. Later, he specialized in Gastrointestinal Surgery from Madras Medical College, Chennai, India which is the oldest medical college in Asia having

started in 1835. He had his advanced training in Hepatopancreaticobiliary surgery and Liver Transplantation from Apollo Hospitals, New Delhi which performs more

than 300 liver transplants every year. He has numerous publications to his credit and has been invited to deliver talks in South Korea and Japan. He had also been

invited to demonstrate major esophageal, liver and pancreatic surgeries in medical colleges and Cancer Institutes in various parts of India. He presently leads the

Hepatobiliary and Liver Transplant Unit at Velammal Medical College, Madurai, India.

madhusj1982@gmail.com

Madhusudhanan Jegadeesan

Velammal Medical College, India

Madhusudhanan Jegadeesan, J Gastrointest Dig Syst 2018, Volume 8

DOI: 10.4172/2161-069X-C8-084