Current opinion in clinical nutrition and metabolic care
-
Curr Opin Clin Nutr Metab Care · May 2003
Review Comparative StudyEnteral nutrition delivery technique.
Ingestion and absorption of a nutritionally adequate diet is necessary to maintain normal body composition and organ function. Patients with all kinds of diseases are at increased risk of developing nutritional abnormalities from anorexia, dietary restriction, malabsorption, increased intestinal losses or altered nutrient requirements. Therefore, it is important for doctors to understand the general principles of clinical nutrition for optimal management of patients with various disorders. The purpose of this review is to highlight an important aspect of nutrition: methods for enteral nutrient delivery. Enteral feeding is the preferred method to provide nutritional support in patients who cannot or will not eat but who have a functional gastrointestinal tract. The placement of a small-diameter nasogastric or nasoduodenal tube is the simplest technique for feeding patients who are unlikely to require tube feeding for more than 6 weeks. Gastrostomy, gastrojejunostomy and jejunostomy tubes placed by using endoscopic, radiologic, or surgical techniques should be considered in patients who require long-term feeding. With newer endoscopic feeding techniques replacing more conventional surgical techniques, this review proposes to discuss the newer developments in techniques of enteral feeding. ⋯ Percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy placement is an appropriate method for providing nutrition in ill patients if no contraindication to enteral feeding exists. In certain situations, percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy placement may even be used to make the life of a terminally ill patient comfortable.
-
Products of infection, ischemia, and injury stimulate the innate immune system to release proinflammatory cytokines, which act locally to activate specific cellular immune responses and initiate recovery. In pathological cases, however, cytokines are released systemically, resulting in progressive tissue injury, hypotension, organ dysfunction, or death. Observations that animals frequently succumb to systemic inflammation long after the peak activity of tumor necrosis factor and interleukin-1beta suggest that later-acting, downstream inflammatory factors can mediate the pathological sequelae of lethal systemic inflammation. Here, the authors review evidence that the chromosomal protein high mobility group box 1 is a late-acting, downstream mediator of pathological inflammation. ⋯ Several high mobility group box 1 antagonists have recently been identified. These inhibitors may prove effective in a significantly wider therapeutic window than has been available for previous anti-cytokine strategies, because high mobility group box 1 appears in serum with a significantly delayed kinetics as compared with other cytokines.
-
Curr Opin Clin Nutr Metab Care · Mar 2003
ReviewNutrition support in critically ill septic patients.
Infection and sepsis remain major challenges in the critically ill. How nutritional therapy can effect real clinical outcomes is not easily apparent from the clinical data. Despite reducing infectious incidence, many studies show little difference in meaningful clinical outcomes. ⋯ Encouraging new evidence will help our decision making and shows that outcome can be improved by performing relatively simple therapies well.
-
Curr Opin Clin Nutr Metab Care · Mar 2003
ReviewImmune-enhancing diets for stressed patients with a special emphasis on arginine content: analysis of the analysis.
After two decades of intensive research, whether arginine-enriched diets for oral/enteral administration are beneficial or harmful for stressed patients remains uncertain. An American consensus and a meta-analysis provide divergent conclusions. The main goal of the present review is to analyze these documents. ⋯ In light of the current doubts and until convincing data are produced, immune-enhancing diets should not be used in unstable critically ill patients.
-
Curr Opin Clin Nutr Metab Care · Mar 2003
ReviewRole of L-glutamine in critical illness: new insights.
This review will attempt to summarize recent clinical and experimental data on glutamine's use in critical illness. It will try to present the concept of glutamine as a 'drug' or 'nutraceutical', given in addition to standard nutritional support. ⋯ High-dose or parenteral (>0.20-0.30 g/kg/day or > or =30 g/day) glutamine appears to demonstrate the greatest potential for benefit in critically ill patients. No evidence of harm has been observed in studies conducted to date, thus further clinical trials utilizing glutamine as a pharmacologic supplement to standard nutrition are warranted.