What is pancreatitis?
Many people in the medical community believe there is an association with the estrogen in hormone-based birth controls, such as Yaz, and an increase in blood levels of triglycerides that can cause pancreatitis in individuals that use these oral contraceptives. There is a belief that estrogen may actually have a toxic effect within the pancreas itself.
Yaz pancreatitis is an inflammation of the pancreas. The pancreas is a large gland behind the stomach and near to the duodenum (the beginning of the small intestine). The primary job of the pancreas is to secrete digestive fluids, or enzymes, into the duodenum, through a tube called the pancreatic duct. Pancreatic enzymes mix with bile – a liquid made in the liver and stored in the gallbladder – to digest food. The pancreas' secondary job is to also release the hormones insulin and glucagon into the bloodstream. These hormones help manage the body's glucose levels from food intake.
Digestive enzymes, secreted by the pancreas, typically do not become active until they reach the small intestine. However, when the pancreas becomes inflamed, the enzymes inside will attack and damage the tissues that create them.
Pancreatitis could be acute or chronic, but either form is serious and could lead to complications. In severe cases bleeding, infection and permanent tissue damage could occur.
A conclusion can be made with:
• Abdominal ultrasound
• Computerized tomography scan (CT)
• Endoscopic ultrasound (EUS)
• Magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography (MRCP)
If you have any questions or concerns after developing pancreatitis, connected with taking the contraceptive Yaz, be sure to contact an attorney to file a law suit and get the fair treatment and justice you are deserved.