Ashcroft Hospitalized With Pancreatitis
NewsMax.com Wires
Friday, March 5, 2004
WASHINGTON Attorney General John Ashcroft was in a
hospital intensive care unit Friday after suffering a severe case
of gallstone pancreatitis, a serious and painful abdominal illness.
Ashcroft, a 61-year-old former U.S. senator and governor of Missouri,
was being treated with antibiotics. The ailment often clears up
after a week or so of treatment but sometimes requires surgery. In
extreme cases, it can cause death.
Doctors at George Washington University Hospital said they
needed more time to evaluate Ashcroft and make a prognosis. It's
possible he could remain hospitalized for a month or more.
Under Justice Department rules, Deputy Attorney General James
Comey is authorized to exercise "all power and authority" of the
attorney general. No transfer of power is necessary.
Ashcroft initially thought his sudden sickness was a stomach
flu. But he began feeling so ill Thursday afternoon that he
canceled an appearance at a news conference where he was to
announce terrorism convictions.
After returning to his Capitol Hill home, his condition worsened,
and he was examined by Dr. Daniel Parks, the White House physician,
said Justice Department spokesman Mark Corallo. Parks advised
Ashcroft to go to an emergency room, and the attorney general was
taken to the hospital Thursday evening.
"After a full medical workup in the emergency room, it was
determined that he was suffering from a severe case of gallstone
pancreatitis," Corallo said.
Pancreatitis is an inflammation of the pancreas, a gland that
secretes digestive enzymes and insulin. The two main causes are
alcohol abuse and, as in Ashcroft's case, a gallstone that blocks
the passage from the pancreas to the beginning of the small
intestine. It also can be caused by infection, injury or certain
medications.
The illness often occurs when a gallstone becomes lodged in
the passage that leads from the pancreas to the small intestine.
Symptoms include sudden, severe abdominal pain, loss of appetite,
nausea, vomiting and fever.
About 20 percent of the 80,000 cases of acute pancreatitis each
year are classified as severe, according to the National Institutes
of Health.
Dr. John Baillie, a gastroenterologist and professor of medicine
at Duke University Medical Center, said people with severe
pancreatitis often stay in the hospital for a month or longer. He
said there is a 10 to 20 percent risk of death, but those tend to
occur among older people who have underlying medical conditions
such as kidney disease or poorly controlled diabetes.
Baillie explained that pancreatitis is "like a hand grenade
going off, an explosion in the abdomen" that shuts
down the digestive system and causes a sharp internal buildup in
fluids.
Treatment involves fasting, to allow the pancreas to rest by
reducing its secretions, as well as antibiotics and painkillers.
Pancreatitis caused by a gallstone usually eases when the gallstone
passes, but sometimes surgery is necessary.
Much depends on whether the inflammation was severe enough to
cause serious damage to the pancreas, which can trigger low blood
pressure and damage other organs. Half of all patients with severe pancreatitis
require surgery later to remove dead tissue in the
pancreas.
Ashcroft is something of a fitness buff. He enjoys hiking,
skiing, playing basketball, and clearing brush on property he owns
in western Virginia. He usually takes five flights of stairs rather
than the elevator to and from his office suite in the Justice
Department.
He is highly religious. At the Springfield, Mo.,
headquarters of his denomination, the Assemblies of God, the Rev.
Thomas E. Trask used the intercom system to lead about 1,100
employees in a prayer for Ashcroft.
© 2004 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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