World journal of surgery
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World journal of surgery · Jun 1999
Meta AnalysisPerioperative nutrition support for patients undergoing gastrointestinal surgery: critical analysis and recommendations.
There is a high incidence of malnutrition in hospitalized patients undergoing gastrointestinal surgery. Malnutrition is clearly associated with increased morbidity and mortality after major gastrointestinal surgery. ⋯ From multiple prospective, randomized trials, significant benefit from perioperative nutritional support has been demonstrated in severely malnourished patients undergoing major surgery. Results of the prospective, randomized trials studying the effects of perioperative nutrition support on patients undergoing gastrointestinal surgery are reviewed and critically analyzed.
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Catheter-related bloodstream infections (CBIs) rank among the most frequent and potentially lethal nosocomial infections. Intravascular devices become contaminated on the outer surface during nonaseptic insertion or maintenance of the catheter exit site or endoluminally during hub manipulation. CBI is heralded by spiking fever, malaise and rigors and should be promptly diagnosed to prevent endocarditis and septic metastasis. ⋯ Prevention strategies should aim at avoiding extra- and endoluminal contamination and should be based on three main pillars: maximal aseptic barriers at insertion, appropriate site maintenance, and junctional (hub) care and protection. Treatment includes catheter withdrawal and appropriate antibiotic coverage. For long-term cuffed catheters, local treatment with intraluminal administration of antibiotics is effective and can save a significant number of catheters, particularly those colonized by coagulase-negative staphylococci.
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The critically ill patient exhibits a well defined endocrine and metabolic adaptive response to stressor agents, characterized by incremented resting energy expenditure (hypermetabolism, which is believed to signify increased energy requirements), accelerated whole-body proteolysis (hypercatabolism), and lipolysis. These phenomena occur in the acute stage, which is also characterized by hyperglycemia, typically accompanied by a hyperdynamic cardiovascular reaction manifested by high cardiac output, increased oxygen consumption, high body temperature, and decrease peripheral vascular resistance. High provisions of glucose-derived calories tend to accentuate these reactions and increase the degree of hyperglycemia. ⋯ In contrast, our hypocaloric-hyperproteic approach has resulted in a more physiologic clinical course and considerable reduction in cost. The infusion of high glucose loads, such as those used in hypercaloric TPN, does not seem to suppress the excessive endogenous production of glucose but instead markedly exacerbates the hyperglycemia of the postinjury and acute stress condition. We believe that the hypocaloric-hyperproteic regimen we utilize during the first few days of the stress situation is more in accordance with the inflammatory and hormonal mediator climate of the initial stages of the flow phase and thus appears to be beneficial vis-à-vis the hypercaloric loads that many use as routine metabolic support in critically ill patients.