Insights into the development of alcoholic chronic pancreatitis at Soweto, South Africa: a controlled cross-sectional study.
Pancreas 2011;
40:508-16. [PMID:
21499204 DOI:
10.1097/mpa.0b013e318214f94a]
[Citation(s) in RCA: 2] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/26/2022]
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
We asked why so few working-class Africans of Soweto have chronic pancreatitis (CP) when alcoholism is the norm.
METHODS
Twenty-one alcoholics with acute psychosis but normal pancreas were investigated for lifestyle, micronutrient status, electrophilic stress, and iron overload.
RESULTS
Alcoholics consumed more ethanol daily than did 14 previously studied patients with CP (P = 0.003); cigarette usage was similar; both groups had even poorer vitamin C status than 14 healthy controls, and no participant had iron overload. The CP group had higher scores for exposure to occupational xenobiotics than did alcoholics (P < 0.05), with lower plasma glutathione (P = 0.047) and urinary inorganic sulfate (P = 0.009). Further analysis identified hyperhomocysteinemia in the alcoholic set, with lower vitamin B12 (P < 0.001), higher folic acid (P = 0.003), and similar vitamin B6 levels compared with controls.
CONCLUSIONS
The transition from alcoholism to CP in Soweto is associated with occupational exposure to xenobiotics. Among detoxification systems that are strained thereby, glutathione and inorganic sulfate depend on methionine intake, which is ample in Sowetans, whereas vitamin C, which exerts a glutathione-sparing effect, is deficient. Hence, a daily tablet of vitamin C may enable community prophylaxis against the disease--but homocysteine status would need monitoring.
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