Literature DB >> 2264960

Nutrition in acute spinal cord injury.

P A Blissitt.   

Abstract

Nutrition in acute spinal cord injury is complicated. Not every aspect of nutrition as it relates to the acutely injured spinal cord patient is known. The stress response to injury, fever, infection, sepsis, and surgery alter nutritional needs, as does the spinal cord injury itself. The sequelae of spinal cord injury, including denervation atrophy and paralysis, glucose intolerance, skin and wound breakdown, poikilothermy, anemia, respiratory paralysis, pneumonia, paralytic ileus, gastrointestinal ulcers and hemorrhage, neurogenic bowel and bladder, and depression, all affect the nutritional needs of the patient. Orthopedic appliances, pharmacologic agents, and other injuries can also alter nutritional requirements. Nutritional assessment in acute spinal cord injury is also complex. It should include medical and diet history, physical examination, intake and output measurements, prediction of energy expenditure and protein requirements, or--even better--measurements of energy expenditure with indirect methodology, using the metabolic cart or pulmonary artery catheter. Application of computerized tomography and radioisotope studies may prove valuable in the future. Finally, the direct relationship between nutrition and physiologic alterations of acute spinal cord injury necessitates that the critical care nurse incorporate nutrition-focused thinking into many aspects of the acute spinal cord--injured patient's care.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1990        PMID: 2264960

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Crit Care Nurs Clin North Am        ISSN: 0899-5885            Impact factor:   1.326


  5 in total

1.  Resting energy expenditure in male athletes with a spinal cord injury.

Authors:  Fiona E Pelly; Elizabeth M Broad; Natalie Stuart; Mark A Holmes
Journal:  J Spinal Cord Med       Date:  2017-05-04       Impact factor: 1.985

Review 2.  Clinical assessment and management of obesity in individuals with spinal cord injury: a review.

Authors:  Suparna Rajan; Marguerite J McNeely; Catherine Warms; Barry Goldstein
Journal:  J Spinal Cord Med       Date:  2008       Impact factor: 1.985

3.  Repair mechanism of astrocytes and non-astrocytes in spinal cord injury.

Authors:  Xiang-Yun Liu; Jian-Wei Guo; Jian-Qiang Kou; Yuan-Liang Sun; Xiu-Jun Zheng
Journal:  World J Clin Cases       Date:  2020-03-06       Impact factor: 1.337

4.  Malnutrition in spinal cord injury: more than nutritional deficiency.

Authors:  Yannis Dionyssiotis
Journal:  J Clin Med Res       Date:  2012-07-20

5.  Strengthening the skin with topical delivery of keratinocyte growth factor-1 using a novel DNA plasmid.

Authors:  Chunqing Dou; Frank Lay; Amir Mehdi Ansari; Donald J Rees; Ali Karim Ahmed; Olga Kovbasnjuk; Aerielle E Matsangos; Junkai Du; Sayed Mohammad Hosseini; Charles Steenbergen; Karen Fox-Talbot; Aaron T Tabor; James A Williams; Lixin Liu; Guy P Marti; John W Harmon
Journal:  Mol Ther       Date:  2014-01-17       Impact factor: 11.454

  5 in total

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