Medications
Medicines used to treat
pancreatitis depend on whether the condition is sudden
(acute) or ongoing (chronic) and whether it is mild or severe.
Acute pancreatitis
Medicines can relieve pain in acute pancreatitis until
inflammation goes away.
If you have severe acute pancreatitis, you also may take
medicines to reduce stomach acids. The risk of complications and death
increases if pancreatic tissue is infected. Complications that may occur in or
near the pancreas include tissue death, fluid buildup, blocked veins, and
infection. Other complications of an acute infection may include
shock, respiratory failure, and kidney failure.
Chronic pancreatitis
In addition to pain medicine, people who have chronic illness may
take pancreatic enzymes and
insulin because their damaged pancreas no longer
produces enough of these.
Medication Choices
You may need one or more medicines to treat pancreatitis.
- Pain medicine. Mild
pain is first treated with a medicine such as acetaminophen or ibuprofen. If
you have stronger pain, you may be given the narcotic meperidine (Demerol) or
morphine. Health professionals also use other medicines and procedures to
treat
pain in chronic pancreatitis.
- Medicines to
suppress pancreatic enzymes. In severe acute pancreatitis, medicines may
be given to keep the pancreas from producing
enzymes. The medicines include somatostatin and
octreotide. These medicines, which are rarely used, may reduce
complications.2
- Medicines
to suppress stomach acid. You may take these along with medicines to
suppress pancreatic enzymes in severe acute and chronic pancreatitis. The
medicines include H2-receptor blockers (such as cimetidine [generic], Pepcid,
or Zantac) and proton pump inhibitors (such as Losec or Prevacid). Studies have
shown that they are not effective for most people with pancreatitis, but they
may prevent other problems, such as bleeding in the
digestive tract
.2 - Pancreatic enzyme
supplements. In advanced chronic pancreatitis, the pancreas may stop
producing the enzymes needed to digest fats, proteins, and carbohydrates.
Enzyme supplements at meals can help the body digest fats, allowing you to
retain nutrients and gain weight.
- Insulin.
Advanced chronic pancreatitis can lead to
diabetes if the part of the pancreas that produces
insulin becomes damaged.
What To Think About
Side effects of pancreatic enzymes that are given to treat
chronic pancreatitis include abdominal discomfort and soreness of the mouth and
the anus. People who are allergic to pork or who do not eat pork for other
reasons should not take these enzymes, because they are made of pork protein.
In young children, high doses of pancreatic enzymes could cause a
bowel obstruction.