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Enteral nutritional therapy in septic patients in the intensive care unit: compliance with nutritional guidelines for critically ill patients

OBJECTIVE: Evaluate the compliance of septic patients' nutritional management with enteral nutrition guidelines for critically ill patients. METHODS: Prospective cohort study with 92 septic patients, age ≥18 years, hospitalized in an intensive care unit, under enteral nutrition, evaluated accor...

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Autores principales: Pasinato, Valeska Fernandes, Berbigier, Marina Carvalho, Rubin, Bibiana de Almeida, Castro, Kamila, Moraes, Rafael Barberena, Perry, Ingrid Dalira Schweigert
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Associação Brasileira de Medicina intensiva 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4031857/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23887755
http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/S0103-507X2013000100005
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author Pasinato, Valeska Fernandes
Berbigier, Marina Carvalho
Rubin, Bibiana de Almeida
Castro, Kamila
Moraes, Rafael Barberena
Perry, Ingrid Dalira Schweigert
author_facet Pasinato, Valeska Fernandes
Berbigier, Marina Carvalho
Rubin, Bibiana de Almeida
Castro, Kamila
Moraes, Rafael Barberena
Perry, Ingrid Dalira Schweigert
author_sort Pasinato, Valeska Fernandes
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: Evaluate the compliance of septic patients' nutritional management with enteral nutrition guidelines for critically ill patients. METHODS: Prospective cohort study with 92 septic patients, age ≥18 years, hospitalized in an intensive care unit, under enteral nutrition, evaluated according to enteral nutrition guidelines for critically ill patients, compliance with caloric and protein goals, and reasons for not starting enteral nutrition early or for discontinuing it. Prognostic scores, length of intensive care unit stay, clinical progression, and nutritional status were also analyzed. RESULTS: The patients had a mean age of 63.4±15.1 years, were predominantly male, were diagnosed predominantly with septic shock (56.5%), had a mean intensive care unit stay of 11 (7.2 to 18.0) days, had 8.2±4.2 SOFA and 24.1±9.6 APACHE II scores, and had 39.1% mortality. Enteral nutrition was initiated early in 63% of patients. Approximately 50% met the caloric and protein goals on the third day of intensive care unit stay, a percentage that decreased to 30% at day 7. Reasons for the late start of enteral nutrition included gastrointestinal tract complications (35.3%) and hemodynamic instability (32.3%). Clinical procedures were the most frequent reason to discontinue enteral nutrition (44.1%). There was no association between compliance with the guidelines and nutritional status, length of intensive care unit stay, severity, or progression. CONCLUSION: Although the number of septic patients under early enteral nutrition was significant, caloric and protein goals at day 3 of intensive care unit stay were met by only half of them, a percentage that decreased at day 7.
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spelling pubmed-40318572014-06-02 Enteral nutritional therapy in septic patients in the intensive care unit: compliance with nutritional guidelines for critically ill patients Pasinato, Valeska Fernandes Berbigier, Marina Carvalho Rubin, Bibiana de Almeida Castro, Kamila Moraes, Rafael Barberena Perry, Ingrid Dalira Schweigert Rev Bras Ter Intensiva Original Article OBJECTIVE: Evaluate the compliance of septic patients' nutritional management with enteral nutrition guidelines for critically ill patients. METHODS: Prospective cohort study with 92 septic patients, age ≥18 years, hospitalized in an intensive care unit, under enteral nutrition, evaluated according to enteral nutrition guidelines for critically ill patients, compliance with caloric and protein goals, and reasons for not starting enteral nutrition early or for discontinuing it. Prognostic scores, length of intensive care unit stay, clinical progression, and nutritional status were also analyzed. RESULTS: The patients had a mean age of 63.4±15.1 years, were predominantly male, were diagnosed predominantly with septic shock (56.5%), had a mean intensive care unit stay of 11 (7.2 to 18.0) days, had 8.2±4.2 SOFA and 24.1±9.6 APACHE II scores, and had 39.1% mortality. Enteral nutrition was initiated early in 63% of patients. Approximately 50% met the caloric and protein goals on the third day of intensive care unit stay, a percentage that decreased to 30% at day 7. Reasons for the late start of enteral nutrition included gastrointestinal tract complications (35.3%) and hemodynamic instability (32.3%). Clinical procedures were the most frequent reason to discontinue enteral nutrition (44.1%). There was no association between compliance with the guidelines and nutritional status, length of intensive care unit stay, severity, or progression. CONCLUSION: Although the number of septic patients under early enteral nutrition was significant, caloric and protein goals at day 3 of intensive care unit stay were met by only half of them, a percentage that decreased at day 7. Associação Brasileira de Medicina intensiva 2013 /pmc/articles/PMC4031857/ /pubmed/23887755 http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/S0103-507X2013000100005 Text en http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Article
Pasinato, Valeska Fernandes
Berbigier, Marina Carvalho
Rubin, Bibiana de Almeida
Castro, Kamila
Moraes, Rafael Barberena
Perry, Ingrid Dalira Schweigert
Enteral nutritional therapy in septic patients in the intensive care unit: compliance with nutritional guidelines for critically ill patients
title Enteral nutritional therapy in septic patients in the intensive care unit: compliance with nutritional guidelines for critically ill patients
title_full Enteral nutritional therapy in septic patients in the intensive care unit: compliance with nutritional guidelines for critically ill patients
title_fullStr Enteral nutritional therapy in septic patients in the intensive care unit: compliance with nutritional guidelines for critically ill patients
title_full_unstemmed Enteral nutritional therapy in septic patients in the intensive care unit: compliance with nutritional guidelines for critically ill patients
title_short Enteral nutritional therapy in septic patients in the intensive care unit: compliance with nutritional guidelines for critically ill patients
title_sort enteral nutritional therapy in septic patients in the intensive care unit: compliance with nutritional guidelines for critically ill patients
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4031857/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23887755
http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/S0103-507X2013000100005
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