| Literature DB >> 8437322 |
V Koehn1, B Burnand, M Niquille, F Paccaud, P Magnenat, B Yersin.
Abstract
Available data on the nutritional status of alcoholics is controversial. The present study was conducted to assess the frequency of malnutrition in alcoholic inpatients. The objectives were to (1) compare anthropometric data of hospitalized alcoholic and nonalcoholic patients and (2) evaluate the association between alcoholism and protein-energy malnutrition. It was a cross-sectional comparative study including a stratified analysis to control for potential confounding factors. Alcoholics were identified as patients with a score from the Michigan Alcoholism Screening Test > or = 8 among patients admitted consecutively to the general wards of a department of internal medicine; they were matched for sex, age, and time of admission with nonalcoholic patients (Michigan Alcoholism Screening Test score < or = 4). Nutritional status was assessed using weight, height, midarm circumference, and tricipital skinfold thickness values, which were then used to determine the Quetelet body mass index and the mid-arm muscle circumference. The study took place in general wards of internal medicine in a 1000-bed city and teaching hospital in Lausanne, Switzerland. The participants were 93 alcoholic patients and 93 controls aged 20 to 75 years, admitted from September 1, 1988, to March 18, 1989. Alcoholics were characterized by a low rate of severe protein-energy malnutrition (< 5%); their average body weight was normal, similar to the weight of nonalcoholic inpatients, and not greatly influenced by the presence or severity of concomitant liver disease. However, tricipital skinfold thickness was lower in alcoholics than in nonalcoholics (8 mm vs 10 mm, p < .05, and 13 mm vs 20 mm, p < .01, in men and women, respectively).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1993 PMID: 8437322 DOI: 10.1177/014860719301700135
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JPEN J Parenter Enteral Nutr ISSN: 0148-6071 Impact factor: 4.016