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Apex Nursing

Reference — Gastrointestinal

Pancreatitis Severity & Labs Reference

The enzymes confirm pancreatitis; the supporting labs and the scoring criteria tell you how sick the patient is. Lipase makes the diagnosis — but calcium, BUN, and hematocrit trends predict the trajectory.

Educational use only. Reference ranges and scoring thresholds vary by source and lab; use your facility’s values and clinical context. Severity scoring guides — it does not replace — clinical judgment. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

The Labs

LabChangeNote
Lipase↑ (often ~3× normal)More specific than amylase; rises early and stays up longer — the key diagnostic enzyme
Amylase↑ (often ~3× normal)Rises early, falls within a few days; less specific (other conditions raise it)
CalciumFat saponification binds calcium; hypocalcemia is a SEVERITY marker — watch for tetany
GlucoseImpaired insulin release from islet damage; may need insulin
WBCInflammation; a new rise later suggests infected necrosis
Triglycerides↑ (if the cause)Very high triglycerides can cause pancreatitis
ALT / bilirubin↑ (gallstone cause)Elevated ALT points toward a biliary etiology

Enzyme height does NOT predict severity — scoring systems and trend markers do.

Ranson’s Criteria

At admission

  • Age > 55 years
  • WBC > 16,000/mm³
  • Glucose > 200 mg/dL
  • AST > 250
  • LDH > 350

Within 48 hours

  • Hematocrit drop > 10%
  • BUN rise > 5 mg/dL
  • Calcium < 8 mg/dL
  • PaO₂ < 60 mmHg
  • Base deficit > 4
  • Fluid sequestration > 6 L

More criteria met = higher predicted mortality. The 48-hour markers (especially a rising BUN and falling calcium/hematocrit drop) track the slide toward severe disease.

Trend Markers to Watch

Rising BUN and a rising/persistently high hematocrit reflect inadequate volume against third-spacing — and predict worse outcomes; falling them with fluids is reassuring. CRP (peaks ~48–72 h) tracks inflammation severity. A new WBC rise with fever after the first days suggests infected necrosis.

NCLEX Pearls

  • Lipase is the more specific, longer-lasting enzyme — the key diagnostic lab.
  • Calcium FALLS in pancreatitis (saponification) and low calcium is a severity sign.
  • Enzyme magnitude doesn't equal severity — Ranson's criteria and trend markers do.
  • Rising BUN and hematocrit signal under-resuscitation; they should fall with adequate fluids.
  • A new fever + rising WBC days in suggests infected pancreatic necrosis.

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This page is written to align with American College of Gastroenterology (ACG) / AGA · ASPEN (nutrition support). It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →