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Pancreatitis is an inflammatory condition of the pancreas characterized by acute or chronic abdominal pain due to premature activation of digestive enzymes that begin auto-digesting pancreatic tissue. Acute pancreatitis commonly results from gallstones, alcohol intake, hypertriglyceridemia, infections, drug reactions, trauma, or metabolic causes, presenting with sudden severe epigastric pain radiating to the back, nausea, vomiting, fever, and elevated pancreatic enzymes. Chronic pancreatitis develops from long-term inflammation leading to irreversible fibrosis, digestive enzyme insufficiency, diabetes, weight loss, and recurrent abdominal pain. Complications include necrosis, pseudocysts, organ failure, and malabsorption. Prompt evaluation is essential due to high morbidity.
Homoeopathy focuses on the totality of symptoms—type of abdominal pain, modalities, vomiting, bloating, stool changes, emotional triggers, alcohol history, dietary intolerance, and constitutional tendencies. Remedies are selected based on acute presentation or chronic pancreatic degeneration. Acute prescriptions aim to relieve inflammation, burning pains, spasms, vomiting, or bloating, while constitutional medicines work to reduce recurrent attacks, strengthen digestion, regulate secretions, improve liver–pancreas function, and address associated alcoholism, stress, or metabolic imbalance.
Indicated when pain is burning and tearing, worse at midnight, with extreme restlessness and anxiety. The patient feels exhausted yet fearful, with intense thirst for small sips and vomiting of everything eaten.
Ipecac is suited for patients with continuous nausea and vomiting not relieved by vomiting. The stomach feels full of gas, and epigastric pain is sharp. The tongue remains clean despite intense nausea.
Nux Vomica fits irritable, oversensitive patients with abdominal spasms, cramps, and vomiting after alcohol or heavy meals. Pain is gripping, worse in the early morning, and associated with constipation and ineffectual urging.
The patient experiences violent abdominal pain with cold sweat, vomiting, extreme weakness, and collapse. Indicated for severe acute episodes with profuse vomiting and diarrhea.
Carbo Veg suits patients in a state of exhaustion with abdominal fullness, bloating, and inability to digest fats. They crave fresh air, feel cold, and may have cyanotic tendencies during acute attacks.
Chelidonium suits pancreatitis associated with biliary congestion or gallstone triggers. Pain radiates to the right scapula, digestion is weak, stool may be clay-colored, and liver involvement is strong.
The patient bends double or presses the abdomen for relief. Pain is cutting and twisting, often triggered by anger or emotional upset. Vomiting may accompany violent cramps.
Useful when even small amounts of food cause bloating, sour eructations, or heaviness in the pancreas area. Pain worsens from 4–8 p.m., and the patient may be anxious about health.
A key remedy for pancreatic inflammation. There is intense burning in the stomach and pancreas region, sour watery vomiting, and worsening after rich or fatty foods.
Indicated for sudden onset with intense, throbbing pain, high fever, abdominal sensitivity, and red flushed face. Even slight touch worsens the pain.
This remedy helps in chronic weakness from prolonged digestive issues. The patient has bloating, gurgling, distension after meals, and marked weakness from fluid loss or diarrhea.
Suited for apathetic, weak patients who suffer abdominal discomfort and chronic digestive issues after emotional exhaustion. Stools may be watery, and digestion painfully slow.
Indicated when gas cannot be passed either upward or downward, causing extreme abdominal distension. Pain centers around pancreas and upper abdomen.
Suited for patients with gastric irritability, thick white-coated tongue, and indigestion triggered by overeating or fatty foods. Pain may radiate upward with nausea.
Indicated when recurrent pancreatic inflammation leads to malabsorption, acidity, early morning diarrhea, and burning epigastric pains. The patient feels hot, thirsty, and mentally active.
Helpful when liver–pancreas dysfunction coexists. Pain extends to the right upper abdomen, digestion is weak, and fatty food intolerance is marked.
Bryonia suits patients whose pain worsens from slightest motion and improves when lying still or pressing abdomen. Thirst for large quantities and dryness are characteristic.
Aloe suits patients with pancreatic irritation leading to sudden urges, mucus in stool, and abdominal heaviness. Eating worsens pain.
Suited for irritable patients with oversensitivity to pain. The abdomen is bloated, and the patient is restless, complaining, and intolerant of discomfort.
Kali Carb is indicated when pains are stitching and radiate to the back or chest, worse at 2–4 a.m., with weakness, swelling, and sensitivity around the abdomen.
Pancreatitis requires careful consideration of the nature of pain, triggers such as alcohol or fatty foods, digestive patterns, associated liver or gallbladder dysfunction, and the patient’s constitutional background. Homoeopathic treatment aims to reduce acute inflammation, support pancreatic healing, regulate digestive secretions, and prevent recurrent attacks. With individualized remedy selection and proper supportive care, patients often experience improved digestion, reduced frequency of attacks, and better long-term pancreatic health.
LEGAL DISCLAIMER: Any information on diseases and treatments mentioned on this video or channel are for educational and informational purposes only, should NOT be used without clearance (written medical prescription) from your physician or health care provider. Information on this video / channel is NOT intended as a diagnosis, treatment or as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis and treatment. We do not claim to cure any disease which is considered incurable on the basis of scientific facts by modern medicine. Please consult Dr. Umang Khanna or other health care professional for your specific health care and/or medical needs or concerns. / इस वीडियो की सभी जानकारी केवल सूचनात्मक उद्देश्य के लिए है और पेशेवर चिकित्सा उपचार के लिए कदापि नहीं है।
Pancreatitis is inflammation of the pancreas, which can be acute (sudden) or chronic (long-term), causing digestive problems and abdominal pain.
Causes include gallstones, excessive alcohol consumption, certain medications, infections, high triglycerides, and trauma to the pancreas.
Symptoms include upper abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, fever, rapid heartbeat, and sometimes jaundice.
Treatment includes fasting to rest the pancreas, IV fluids, pain relief, treating underlying causes, medications, and sometimes surgery in severe cases.
Prevention includes limiting alcohol intake, maintaining a healthy diet, managing cholesterol and triglycerides, avoiding smoking, and prompt treatment of gallstones.