Literature DB >> 16843394

Impact of enteral nutrition on intestinal bacterial translocation and mortality in burned mice.

M Braga1, L Gianotti, E Costantini, A Di Francesco, C Socci, G Paganelli, C Ossi, V Di Carlo.   

Abstract

The aim of these experiments was to study the effect of early enteral nutrition with either standard or enriched (arginine, n-3 fatty acids, RNA) enteral formulas on translocation of bacteria from the gut and acute mortality rate following thermal injury. In the first experiment 60 Balb c mice were gavaged with 10(10)Escherichia coli and received a 20% burn injury. In 40 mice enteral nutrition (20 standard, 20 enriched) was started immediately after injury and stopped 36 h later. In the control group (n = 20) aliquotes of Ringer's solution was administered intragastrically. Mortality rate was observed for 10 days post-injury. In the second experiment 60 Balb c mice were gavaged with 10(10)E. coli labelled with biotin(111) Indium and then burned. In 40 mice enteral nutrition (20 standard, 20 enriched) was started immediately after burn. The control group (n = 20) received aliquotes of Ringer's solution. 4 h after injury all animals were sacrificed and liver, lungs, kidneys, spleen and systemic blood were harvested, and radionuclide counts were measured. No animal died after day 3 post-burn. The mortality rate was significantly lower at day 1 in the groups infused with both enteral solutions (15%) compared to controls (30%; p = 0.05). At day 3 the animals fed with the enriched diets showed a lower mortality (5%) versus the standard and control groups (10%). Bacterial translocation to the liver and lungs was significantly higher in Ringer's group than in both enterally fed groups. Early post-burn enteral nutrition reduces both translocation and acute mortality. Supplementation of the diets with specific nutrients appears to exert additional advantages on outcome.

Entities:  

Year:  1994        PMID: 16843394     DOI: 10.1016/0261-5614(94)90084-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Nutr        ISSN: 0261-5614            Impact factor:   7.324


  3 in total

1.  Early enteral nutrition in burns: compliance with guidelines and associated outcomes in a multicenter study.

Authors:  Michael J Mosier; Tam N Pham; Matthew B Klein; Nicole S Gibran; Brett D Arnoldo; Richard L Gamelli; Ronald G Tompkins; David N Herndon
Journal:  J Burn Care Res       Date:  2011 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 1.845

Review 2.  Best timing for energy provision during critical illness.

Authors:  Mette M Berger; Claude Pichard
Journal:  Crit Care       Date:  2012-12-12       Impact factor: 9.097

3.  Impact of early enteral versus parenteral nutrition on mortality in patients requiring mechanical ventilation and catecholamines: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial (NUTRIREA-2).

Authors:  Laurent Brisard; Amélie Le Gouge; Jean-Baptiste Lascarrou; Hervé Dupont; Pierre Asfar; Michel Sirodot; Gael Piton; Hoang-Nam Bui; Olivier Gontier; Ali Ait Hssain; Stéphane Gaudry; Jean-Philippe Rigaud; Jean-Pierre Quenot; Virginie Maxime; Carole Schwebel; Didier Thévenin; Saad Nseir; Erika Parmentier; Ahmed El Kalioubie; Mercé Jourdain; Véronique Leray; Nathalie Rolin; Frédéric Bellec; Vincent Das; Frédérique Ganster; Christophe Guitton; Karim Asehnoune; Anne Bretagnol; Nadia Anguel; Jean-Paul Mira; Emmanuel Canet; Bertrand Guidet; Michel Djibre; Benoit Misset; René Robert; Frédéric Martino; Philippe Letocart; Daniel Silva; Michael Darmon; Vlad Botoc; Jean Etienne Herbrecht; Ferhat Meziani; Jérôme Devaquet; Emmanuelle Mercier; Jack Richecoeur; Stéphanie Martin; Emilie Gréau; Bruno Giraudeau; Jean Reignier
Journal:  Trials       Date:  2014-12-23       Impact factor: 2.279

  3 in total

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