Nutritional Therapy Related Complications in Hospitalized Adult Patients: A Korean Multicenter Trial
Journal of Clinical Nutrition
; : 12-22, 2019.
Article
de Ko
| WPRIM
| ID: wpr-764379
Bibliothèque responsable:
WPRO
ABSTRACT
PURPOSE: Nutritional therapy (NT), such as enteral nutrition (EN) or parenteral nutrition (PN), is essential for the malnourished patients. Although the complications related to NT has been well described, multicenter data on symptoms in the patients with receiving NT during hospitalization are still lacking. METHODS: Nutrition support team (NST) consultations, on which NT-related complications were described, were collected retrospectively for one year. The inclusion criteria were patients who were (1) older than 18 years, (2) hospitalized, and (3) receiving EN or PN at the time of NST consultation. The patients' demographics (age, sex, body mass index [BMI]), type of NT and type of complication were collected. To compare the severity of each complication, the intensive care unit (ICU) admission, hospital stay, and type of discharge were also collected. RESULTS: A total of 14,600 NT-related complications were collected from 13,418 cases from 27 hospitals in Korea. The mean age and BMI were 65.4 years and 21.8 kg/m2. The complications according to the type of NT, calorie deficiency (32.4%, n=1,229) and diarrhea (21.6%, n=820) were most common in EN. Similarly, calorie deficiency (56.8%, n=4,030) and GI problem except for diarrhea (8.6%, n=611) were most common in PN. Regarding the clinical outcomes, 18.7% (n=2,158) finally expired, 58.1% (n=7,027) were admitted to ICU, and the mean hospital days after NT-related complication were 31.3 days. Volume overload (odds ratio [OR]=3.48) and renal abnormality (OR=2.50) were closely associated with hospital death; hyperammonemia (OR=3.09) and renal abnormality (OR=2.77) were associated with ICU admission; “micronutrient and vitamin deficiency” (geometric mean [GM]=2.23) and volume overload (GM=1.61) were associated with a longer hospital stay. CONCLUSION: NT may induce or be associated with several complications, and some of them may seriously affect the patient's outcome. NST personnel in each hospital should be aware of each problem during nutritional support.
Mots clés
Texte intégral:
1
Indice:
WPRIM
Sujet Principal:
Orientation vers un spécialiste
/
Vitamines
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Indice de masse corporelle
/
Démographie
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Études rétrospectives
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Études multicentriques comme sujet
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Nutrition entérale
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Nutrition parentérale
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Soutien nutritionnel
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Hyperammoniémie
Type d'étude:
Observational_studies
Limites du sujet:
Adult
/
Humans
Pays comme sujet:
Asia
langue:
Ko
Texte intégral:
Journal of Clinical Nutrition
Année:
2019
Type:
Article