| Literature DB >> 31533772 |
Jan Wernerman1, Kenneth B Christopher2, Djillali Annane3,4, Michael P Casaer5, Craig M Coopersmith6, Adam M Deane7, Elisabeth De Waele8, Gunnar Elke9, Carole Ichai10, Constantine J Karvellas11, Stephen A McClave12, Heleen M Oudemans-van Straaten13, Olav Rooyackers14, Renee D Stapleton15, Jukka Takala16, Arthur R H van Zanten17, Paul E Wischmeyer18, Jean-Charles Preiser19, Jean-Louis Vincent20.
Abstract
Metabolic alterations in the critically ill have been studied for more than a century, but the heterogeneity of the critically ill patient population, the varying duration and severity of the acute phase of illness, and the many confounding factors have hindered progress in the field. These factors may explain why management of metabolic alterations and related conditions in critically ill patients has for many years been guided by recommendations based essentially on expert opinion. Over the last decade, a number of randomized controlled trials have been conducted, providing us with important population-level evidence that refutes several longstanding paradigms. However, between-patient variation means there is still substantial uncertainty when translating population-level evidence to individuals. A cornerstone of metabolic care is nutrition, for which there is a multifold of published guidelines that agree on many issues but disagree on others. Using a series of nine questions, we provide a review of the latest data in this field and a background to promote efforts to address the need for international consistency in recommendations related to the metabolic care of the critically ill patient. Our purpose is not to replace existing guidelines, but to comment on differences and add perspective.Entities:
Keywords: Autophagy; Gut dysfunction; Metabolomics; Permissive underfeeding; Personalized care; Protein requirements; Relevant outcomes
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31533772 PMCID: PMC6751850 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-019-2597-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Fig. 1Autophagy, metabolome, microbiome—the interplay of endogenous and exogenous substrates. Critical illness triggers autophagy, which is concomitantly depressed by exogenous substrates. Intermediary metabolites can be captured in a more sophisticated approach summarized in the metabolome. Further, microbiome-modulated metabolites may influence the metabolomic pool and vice versa be influenced by the degree of underlying critical illness per se and associated treatment, particularly the use of antimicrobial agents
Fig. 2Proposed future approach to the application of prognostic and predictive enrichment strategies for metabolic care and individualized nutrition in critical illness. Individuals are represented by circles filled with different colors to reflect patients with similar metabolic prognostic and predictive characteristics
Fig. 3Proposed schema for the determination of optimal nutrient administration in critical illness. Approach combines metabolic or nutritional intervention with longer-term outcomes, data mining, omics, and evaluation of physiology and metabolism