Nutrition
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We previously reported that omega-6 fat emulsion increases cytokine production in burned rats. Effects of soybean oil emulsion on surgical stress responses and lymphocyte function according to the surgical severity have not been studied in detail. We investigated the effects of soybean oil emulsion, which contains 50% omega-6 fatty acid, on postoperative stress responses and cell-mediated immune function according to the severity of surgical stress. ⋯ Soybean oil emulsion amplifies the stress responses and possibly suppresses cell-mediated immune function induced by surgical stress in severely stressed patients, but not in moderately stressed patients.
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We respectively compared the nutritional and clinical efficacies of eucaloric and hypocaloric enteral feedings in 40 critically ill, obese patients admitted to the trauma or surgical intensive care unit. ⋯ These data suggest that hypocaloric enteral nutrition support is as least as effective as eucaloric feeding in critically ill, obese patients.
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The most basic mechanism of cellular protection involves the expression of a highly conserved family of essential proteins, known as heat shock or stress proteins (HSPs). The expression of these proteins after a sublethal insult can induce "stress tolerance" and protect against a subsequent stress that otherwise would be lethal. Experimental data have shown that preinduction of the heat stress response can provide marked protection against many forms of cellular injury, including ischemia and reperfusion, lung injury, and shock. ⋯ Further, recent data from me and my colleagues indicate that a single dose of intravenous GLN can enhance HSP expression, decrease end-organ injury, and enhance survival from septic shock in the intact rat. Thus GLN, which is beneficial in many settings of critical illness and injury, may be a clinically applicable enhancer of HSP expression. These results indicate that GLN could be used to enhance HSP expression and attenuate end-organ injury in situations when a major clinical stress is anticipated, such as before major surgical procedures (e.g., cardiac, vascular, and transplantation) or in the critically ill.