The word 'pancreas' comes from Greek 'pánkreas' (πάγκρεας), a compound of 'pân' (πᾶν, all, every) and 'kréas' (κρέας, flesh, meat). The name means 'all-flesh' — describing an organ that, unlike the liver or kidneys, consists entirely of soft, homogeneous tissue without bone, cartilage, or hard structures. The name was coined by the Greek anatomist Herophilus of Chalcedon (335–280 BCE), one of the first physicians known to have performed systematic human dissection, at the medical school of Alexandria.
The Greek word 'kréas' (flesh, meat) comes from PIE *krewh₂- (raw flesh, bloody meat, gore). This root produced an interesting family of English words through Latin. Latin 'crudus' (raw, bloody, uncooked) gave English 'crude' (in its original sense of raw or unprocessed). Latin 'crudelis' (cruel, blood-thirsty — literally 'delighting in raw flesh') gave English 'cruel' and
The prefix 'pân-' (all, every) from PIE *peh₂- (all) is equally productive in English: 'pandemic' (all + people), 'panorama' (all + view), 'panacea' (all + cure), 'pantheism' (all + god), 'pantomime' (all + imitation), and 'Pan-American' (all + American).
The pancreas was poorly understood for most of medical history. Galen (2nd century CE) believed it served merely as a cushion for the blood vessels behind the stomach. The first major advance came in 1642, when Johann Georg Wirsung described the main pancreatic duct (now called the duct of Wirsung). In 1869, Paul Langerhans discovered the clusters of hormone-producing cells
The pancreas's dual function — as both an exocrine and an endocrine gland — was not fully understood until the twentieth century. As an exocrine gland, it produces digestive enzymes (trypsin, lipase, amylase) that are secreted through the pancreatic duct into the duodenum. As an endocrine gland, it produces insulin and glucagon in the islets of Langerhans, releasing these hormones directly into the bloodstream to regulate blood sugar.
The discovery of insulin in 1921–1922 by Frederick Banting, Charles Best, James Collip, and John Macleod at the University of Toronto was one of the most dramatic breakthroughs in medical history. Before insulin, a diagnosis of Type 1 diabetes was a death sentence — patients wasted away within months. The first patient treated with insulin, Leonard Thompson (age 14), received his injection on January 11, 1922, and recovered. Banting and Macleod received the Nobel Prize in 1923.
Pancreatitis — inflammation of the pancreas — is a painful and potentially life-threatening condition, most commonly caused by gallstones or alcohol abuse. Pancreatic cancer is one of the deadliest forms of cancer, with a five-year survival rate below 10 percent, largely because it is usually detected late and responds poorly to treatment. The pancreas's deep, hidden position in the abdomen — behind the stomach, in front of the spine — makes both clinical examination and early detection difficult.