• Clin Nutr · Apr 2004

    Malnutrition in critically ill children: from admission to 6 months after discharge.

    • Jessie Hulst, Koen Joosten, Luc Zimmermann, Wim Hop, Stef van Buuren, Hans Büller, Dick Tibboel, and Johannes van Goudoever.
    • Department of Pediatrics, Erasmus MC, Sophia Children's Hospital, 3000 CB Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
    • Clin Nutr. 2004 Apr 1;23(2):223-32.

    Background & AimsLittle is known about the nutritional status of critically ill children during hospitalisation in and after discharge from an intensive care unit. We set up a prospective, observational study to evaluate the nutritional status of children in an intensive care unit from admission up to 6 months after discharge. A secondary aim was identifying patient characteristics that influence the course of the various anthropometric parameters.MethodsThe nutritional status of 293 children--104 preterm neonates, 96 term neonates and 93 older children--admitted to our multidisciplinary tertiary pediatric and neonatal intensive care unit was evaluated by anthropometry upon and during admission, at discharge and 6 weeks and 6 months following discharge.ResultsUpon admission, 24% of all children appeared to be undernourished. Preterm and term neonates, but not older children, showed a decline in nutritional status during admission. At 6 months after discharge almost all children showed complete recovery of nutritional status. Length of stay and history of disease were the parameters that most adversely affected the nutritional status of preterm and term neonates at discharge and during follow-up.ConclusionWhile malnutrition is a major problem in pediatric intensive care units, most children have good long-term outcome in terms of nutritional status after discharge.

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