Frédéric V Valla1,2,3, Florent Baudin4,5, Pierre Demaret6, Shancy Rooze7, Clémence Moullet8, Jacques Cotting9, Carole Ford-Chessel4,10, Robin Pouyau4, Noël Peretti11,12, Lyvonne N Tume13,14, Christophe Milesi15, Bénédicte Gaillard Le Roux16. 1. Paediatric Intensive Care, Hôpital Femme Mère Enfant, Hospices Civils de Lyon, 59 bd Pinel, 69500, Lyon-Bron, France. Frederic.valla@chu-lyon.fr. 2. Faculty of Health and Applied Sciences, The University of the West of England, Glenside Campus, Blackberry Hill, Stapleton, Bristol, BS16 1DD, UK. Frederic.valla@chu-lyon.fr. 3. CarMEN INSERM UMR 1060 Equipe INFOLIP, 69100, Villeurbanne, France. Frederic.valla@chu-lyon.fr. 4. Paediatric Intensive Care, Hôpital Femme Mère Enfant, Hospices Civils de Lyon, 59 bd Pinel, 69500, Lyon-Bron, France. 5. Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1, Ifsttar, UMRESTTE, UMR T 9405, 69373, Lyon, France. 6. Division of Paediatric Critical Care Medicine, Department of Paediatrics, CHC, Liège, Belgium. 7. Paediatric Intensive Care, Hôpital Universitaire des Enfants Reine Fabiola, 1020, Laeken-Brussels, Belgium. 8. Department of Nutrition and Dietetics, Haute Ecole de Santé, University of Applied Sciences of Western Switzerland, Carouge, Geneva, Switzerland. 9. Paediatric Intensive Care, University Hospitals of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland. 10. Paediatric Nutrition and Dietetic Department, Hôpital Femme Mère Enfant, Hospices Civils de Lyon, 59 bd Pinel, 69500, Lyon-Bron, France. 11. CarMEN INSERM UMR 1060 Equipe INFOLIP, 69100, Villeurbanne, France. 12. Paediatric Gastroenerology and Nutrition Department, Hôpital Femme Mère Enfant, Hospices Civils de Lyon, 59 bd Pinel, 69500, Lyon-Bron, France. 13. Faculty of Health and Applied Sciences, The University of the West of England, Glenside Campus, Blackberry Hill, Stapleton, Bristol, BS16 1DD, UK. 14. Paediatric Intensive Care Unit, Bristol Children's Hospital, Upper Maudlin Street, Bristol, UK. 15. Paediatric Intensive Care, Hôpital Arnaud de Villeneuve, 371 av Doyen Giraud, 34296, Montpellier, France. 16. Paediatric Intensive Care, Hôpital Femme Mère Enfant, Nantes, France.
Abstract
Feeding difficulties are common in young infants presenting with acute bronchiolitis, but limited data is available to guide clinicians adapting nutritional management. We aimed to assess paediatricians' nutritional practices among Western Europe French speaking countries. A survey was disseminated to describe advice given to parents for at home nutritional support, in hospital nutritional management, and preferred methods for enteral nutrition and for intravenous fluid management. A documentary search of international guidelines was concomitantly conducted. Ninety-three (66%) contacted physicians responded. Feeding difficulties were a common indication for infants' admission. Written protocols were rarely available. Enteral nutrition was favoured most of the time when oral nutrition was insufficient and might be withheld in case of severe dyspnoea to decrease respiratory workload. Half of physicians were aware of hyponatremia risk and pathophysiology, and isotonic intravenous solutions were used in less than 15% of centres. International guideline search (23 countries) showed a lack of detailed nutritional management recommendations in most of them. Conclusion: practices were inconsistent among physicians. Guidelines detailed nutritional management poorly. Awareness of hyponatremia risk in relation to intravenous hypotonic fluids and of the safety of enteral hydration and nutrition is insufficient. New guidelines including detailed nutritional management recommendations are urgently needed. What is Known? • Infants presenting with acute bronchiolitis face feeding difficulties. • Underfeeding may promote undernutrition, and intravenous hydration with hypotonic fluids may induce hyponatremia. What is New? • Physicians' nutritional practices are inconsistent and awareness of hyponatremia risk and pathophysiology is insufficient among physicians. • Awareness of hyponatremia risk and pathophysiology is insufficient among physicians. • The reasons for enteral nutrition withholding in bronchiolitis infants are not evidence based, and national guidelines of acute bronchiolitis across the world are elusive regarding nutritional management. • National guidelines of acute bronchiolitis across the world are elusive regarding nutritional management.
Feeding difficulties are common in young infants presenting with acute bronchiolitis, but limited data is available to guide clinicians adapting nutritional management. We aimed to assess paediatricians' nutritional practices among Western Europe French speaking countries. A survey was disseminated to describe advice given to parents for at home nutritional support, in hospital nutritional management, and preferred methods for enteral nutrition and for intravenous fluid management. A documentary search of international guidelines was concomitantly conducted. Ninety-three (66%) contacted physicians responded. Feeding difficulties were a common indication for infants' admission. Written protocols were rarely available. Enteral nutrition was favoured most of the time when oral nutrition was insufficient and might be withheld in case of severe dyspnoea to decrease respiratory workload. Half of physicians were aware of hyponatremia risk and pathophysiology, and isotonic intravenous solutions were used in less than 15% of centres. International guideline search (23 countries) showed a lack of detailed nutritional management recommendations in most of them. Conclusion: practices were inconsistent among physicians. Guidelines detailed nutritional management poorly. Awareness of hyponatremia risk in relation to intravenous hypotonic fluids and of the safety of enteral hydration and nutrition is insufficient. New guidelines including detailed nutritional management recommendations are urgently needed. What is Known? • Infants presenting with acute bronchiolitis face feeding difficulties. • Underfeeding may promote undernutrition, and intravenous hydration with hypotonic fluids may induce hyponatremia. What is New? • Physicians' nutritional practices are inconsistent and awareness of hyponatremia risk and pathophysiology is insufficient among physicians. • Awareness of hyponatremia risk and pathophysiology is insufficient among physicians. • The reasons for enteral nutrition withholding in bronchiolitisinfants are not evidence based, and national guidelines of acute bronchiolitis across the world are elusive regarding nutritional management. • National guidelines of acute bronchiolitis across the world are elusive regarding nutritional management.
Authors: Milena Siciliano Nascimento; Danielle E R Quinto; Gisele C Z Oliveira; Celso M Rebello; Cristiane do Prado Journal: Sci Rep Date: 2020-09-28 Impact factor: 4.379