| Literature DB >> 23390469 |
Carlos Seron-Arbeloa1, Monica Zamora-Elson, Lorenzo Labarta-Monzon, Tomas Mallor-Bonet.
Abstract
There is a consensus that nutritional support, which must be provided to patients in intensive care, influences their clinical outcome. Malnutrition is associated in critically ill patients with impaired immune function and impaired ventilator drive, leading to prolonged ventilator dependence and increased infectious morbidity and mortality. Enteral nutrition is an active therapy that attenuates the metabolic response of the organism to stress and favorably modulates the immune system. It is less expensive than parenteral nutrition and is preferred in most cases because of less severe complications and better patient outcomes, including infections, and hospital cost and length of stay. The aim of this work was to perform a review of the use of enteral nutrition in critically ill patients.Entities:
Keywords: Critical care; Critical ill; Enteral feeding; Enteral nutrition; Intensive care; Nutritional support
Year: 2013 PMID: 23390469 PMCID: PMC3564561 DOI: 10.4021/jocmr1210w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med Res ISSN: 1918-3003
Summary of Recommendations for Enteral Nutrition in Critically Ill Patients
| Summary of recommendations for enteral nutrition in critically ill patients | Level of evidence |
|---|---|
| 1. Enteral nutrition is associated with an improvement of nutritional variables, a lower incidence of infections and a reduced length of hospital stay. | A |
| 2. Critically ill patients who cannot be fed orally for a period of more than three days must receive specialized nutritional support. | C |
| 3. Enteral nutrition is preferable to parenteral nutrition. | B |
| 4. Enteral nutrition should be started within the first 24 - 48 hours of admission. | A |
| 5. Enteral nutrition should provide 25 to 30 kcal/kg/day. | C |
| 6. The feedings should be advanced toward goal over the next 48 - 72 hours. | C |
| 7. The enteral nutrition must be deferred until the patient is hemodynamically stable. | C |
| 8. In intensive care unit patients, neither the presence nor absence of bowel sounds and evidence of passage of flatus and stool is required for initiation of enteral nutrition. | B |
Contraindications to Enteral Nutrition
| 1. Diseases associated with ileus: multiple trauma with significant retroperitoneal hematoma and peritonitis |
| 2. Intestinal obstruction |
| 3. Active gastrointestinal hemorrhage |
| 4. Hemodynamic instability: enteral nutrition in an ischemic small bowel can worsen the ischemia and lead to necrosis and bacterial overgrowth |
| 1. Diverticular abscess |
| 2. Early stages of Short bowel syndrome |
| 3. Severe malabsorption |
| 4. Small bowel fistulas, depending on the flow rate and localization |
| 5. Need for early nutritional support and full enteral feeding impossible: |
| Severely malnourished patients with severe hypercatabolism |
| Patients in whom an appropriate intestinal approach cannot be carried out or who do not tolerate the full requirements |
Complications of Enteral Nutrition
| 1. Erosion and/or necrosis and/or infection at the contact zones |
| 2. Pharyngeal, esophageal and/or tracheobronchial perforation and stenosis |
| 3. Tracheoesophageal fistula |
| 4. Malpositioning and removal of the probe |
| 5. Obstruction and tethering of the probe |
| 6. Intraperitoneal leakage through osteotomy site |
| 7. Leakage of the formulation |
| 8. Pulmonary aspiration |
| 9. Hemorrhage |
| 1. Hypertonic dehydration |
| 2. Hyperosmolarity |
| 3. Nonketotic hyperosmolar coma |
| 4. Hyper/hypoglycemia |
| 5. Dyselectrolytemia |
| 6. Hyperhydration |
| 7. Dumping syndrome |
| 8. Refeeding syndrome |
| 9. Hypercapnia |
| 1. Sinusitis and otitis |
| 2. Aspiration pneumonia |
| 3. Necrotizing peritonitis and enteritis |
| 4. Dietary contamination |
| 1. Increased gastric residual volume |
| 2. Constipation |
| 3. Abdominal fullness and distention |
| 4. Vomiting and regurgitation |
| 5. Diarrhea |
| 6. Hypertransaminasemia, hepatomegaly |