| Literature DB >> 34287346 |
Roland N Dickerson1, Christopher T Buckley2.
Abstract
Propofol, a commonly used sedative in the intensive care unit, is formulated in a 10% lipid emulsion that contributes 1.1 kcals per mL. As a result, propofol can significantly contribute to caloric intake and can potentially result in complications of overfeeding for patients who receive concurrent enteral or parenteral nutrition therapy. In order to avoid potential overfeeding, some clinicians have empirically decreased the infusion rate of the nutrition therapy, which also may have detrimental effects since protein intake may be inadequate. The purpose of this review is to examine the current literature regarding these issues and provide some practical suggestions on how to restrict caloric intake to avoid overfeeding and simultaneously enhance protein intake for patients who receive either parenteral or enteral nutrition for those patients receiving concurrent propofol therapy.Entities:
Keywords: critical illness; enteral nutrition; fat emulsions; food–drug interactions; hypnotics and sedatives; nutritional requirements; parenteral nutrition; propofol
Year: 2021 PMID: 34287346 PMCID: PMC8293440 DOI: 10.3390/pharmacy9030121
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmacy (Basel) ISSN: 2226-4787
Summary of reported calorie and protein intakes during concurrent propofol and nutrition therapy.
| Author, Year | Patient Population | N | Nutrition Route | Calories from Nutrition, (kcals/d) | Calories from | Total Calories (kcals/d) | % of Calories from Propofol | Duration of Propofol, Days | Protein Intake (g/kg/d) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Arruda, 2009 | ICU | 30 | EN | - | 356 | - | - | - | - |
| Asa’ari, 2015 * | ICU | 50 | EN and PN | ~1170 | ~130 | ~1300 | 10% | - | - |
| Bousie, 2016 | ICU | 101 | EN and PN | ~1400 | 230 | ~1600 kcals/d | 14% | - | - |
| Buckley, 2021 | Traumatic brain injury | 51 | EN | 16 ± 9 | 356 ± 243 | 22 ± 9 | 24% | 6 ± 4 | 1.5 ± 0.7 |
| Castro, 2020 * | COVID-19 | 39 | EN | ~1473 | 260 | 1733 | 15 ± 8% | 8 ± 6 | 88% of goal |
| Charriere, 2017 | ICU | 687 | EN | ~1216 | 146 ± 117 | 1362 ± 811 | 17 ± 21% | - | - |
| DeChicco, 1995 * | ICU | 19 | EN and PN | ~1350 | 215 | - | 15% of BEE | - | - |
| Ferrie, 2013 | Cardiac failure and ECMO | 86 | EN and PN | ~1464 | 130 ± 184 | 1594 ± 628 | 8% | 9 ± 4 | 58 ± 29 g/d |
| Hastings, 2018 | ICU | 325 | EN and PN | ~1231 | 119 | ~1350 | 8–10% | - | <1.2 for most pts |
| Ibarra, 2020 * | Trauma, Neurologic | 26 | EN | 10 | 2 kcal/kg/d | 12 | 18% | - | 0.4 |
| Rai, 2010 | ICU | 43 | EN | ~1400 | 79 | ~1500 | 5% | - | - |
| Richardson, 2018 * | ICU | ||||||||
| Taylor, 2005 | Trauma, Neurosurgical | 85 | EN | - | - | Goal: BEE X stress factors | 19% | - | <90% goal for 51% of pts; <80% of goal for 21% of pts |
| Terblanche, 2020 | CT-ICU |
* Full paper unavailable or not published; data derived from the published abstract. ALI, acute lung injury; ARDS, adult respiratory distress syndrome; BEE, basal energy expenditure as determined by the Harris–Benedict equations; CT-ICU, cardiothoracic ICU; ECMO, extracorporeal membrane oxygenation; EN, enteral nutrition; ICU, intensive care unit; IQR, interquartile range; PN, parenteral nutrition; pts, patients.
Figure 1Total caloric intake, enteral nutrition calories, and propofol calories over days 2 to 7 for patients who received concurrent enteral nutrition and propofol [6]. One-way ANOVA indicated a significant difference in total caloric intake (p < 0.001) and enteral nutrition caloric intake (p < 0.001), but not propofol caloric intake (p = 0.076). * p < 0.05 from day 2. Day 1 represents a partial day upon admission to the TICU and was not included in the analysis. TICU, trauma intensive care unit.
Figure 2Actual protein intake from the modified EN regimen compared to projected protein intakes with “standard” formulas when given at an isocaloric intake as the modified EN regimen (p < 0.001) for patients who received concurrent enteral nutrition and propofol [6]. Daily protein intakes for each regimen that contain a different letter (e.g., a, b, or c) are significantly different from one another (p < 0.05). Day 1 represents a partial day upon admission to the TICU and was not included in the analysis. TICU, trauma intensive care unit.