| Literature DB >> 26959070 |
Abstract
Intravenous lipid emulsions are an essential component of parenteral nutrition regimens. Originally employed as an efficient non-glucose energy source to reduce the adverse effects of high glucose intake and provide essential fatty acids, lipid emulsions have assumed a larger therapeutic role due to research demonstrating the effects of omega-3 and omega-6 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) on key metabolic functions, including inflammatory and immune response, coagulation, and cell signaling. Indeed, emerging evidence suggests that the effects of omega-3 PUFA on inflammation and immune response result in meaningful therapeutic benefits in surgical, cancer, and critically ill patients as well as patients requiring long-term parenteral nutrition. The present review provides an overview of the mechanisms of action through which omega-3 and omega-6 PUFA modulate the immune-inflammatory response and summarizes the current body of evidence regarding the clinical and pharmacoeconomic benefits of intravenous n-3 fatty acid-containing lipid emulsions in patients requiring parenteral nutrition.Entities:
Keywords: lipid emulsions; omega-3 PUFA; omega-3 fatty acids; parenteral nutrition
Year: 2016 PMID: 26959070 PMCID: PMC4810105 DOI: 10.3390/jcm5030034
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Latest studies/meta-analyses evaluating the benefits of n-3 PUFA (polyunsaturated fatty acids) in parenteral nutrition in surgical populations *.
| Author | Year | Population | Intervention | Duration | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jiang [ | 2010 | Colectomy and rectotomy ( | LCT vs LCT+fish oil | 7 days post-surgery | Significant reduction in LOS and SIRS |
| Wang [ | 2012 | Gastrointestinal surgery ( | MCT/LCT | 5 days post-surgery | Amelioration of liver function and immune status |
| Han [ | 2012 | Major surgery ( | MCT/LCT | 7 days post-surgery | Reduced postoperative liver dysfunction and infection rate |
| Zhu [ | 2012 | Colectomy and rectotomy ( | LCT | 7 days post-surgery | Reduced LOS |
| Zhu [ | 2012 | Liver transplantation ( | Oral diet | 7 days post-surgery | Reduced incidence of liver injury, decreased LOS and infectious complications |
| Berger [ | 2013 | Cardiopulmonary bypass surgery ( | Fish oils vs saline | 12 and 2 h before surgery and after surgery | Decreased biological and clinical signs of inflammation |
| De Miranda Torrinhas [ | 2013 | Surgery for gastrointestinal cancer ( | MCT/LCT | 3 days post-surgery | Significant increase in IL-10 levels (day 3), decrease in IL-6 and IL-10 levels (day 6), less decline in leukocyte oxidative burst |
| Chen [ | 2010 | Major abdominal surgery, meta-analysis ( | Fish oil | Various | Decreased LOS in the hospital and ICU, reduced postoperative infection rate, improved liver function |
| Li [ | 2013 | Major surgery, meta-analysis ( | Fish oil | Various | Decreased infection rate, LOS, and liver dysfunction; no effect on mortality |
| Pradelli [ | 2012 | Subgroup analysis in patients undergoing major abdominal surgery and not admitted to ICU ( | Various | Significant reduction in the infection rate and LOS | |
| Tian [ | 2013 | Surgical patients, meta-analysis ( | Fish oil/LCT/ MCT | Various | No significant difference, fish oil less toxic to liver when compared to LCT or olive oil |
* Adapted from Klek et al. 2015 [122]. Abbreviations: ICU = intensive care unit; LCT = long-chain triglycerides; LOS = length of stay; MCT = medium-chain triglycerides; PN = parenteral nutrition; RCT = randomized clinical trial; SIRS = systemic inflammatory response syndrome.