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A protocol of early aggressive acceleration of tube feeding increases ileus without perceptible benefit in severely burned patients
- Source :
- Journal of burn careresearch : official publication of the American Burn Association. 34(5)
- Publication Year :
- 2013
-
Abstract
- Optimal nutrition is essential to the recovery of burned patients. The authors evaluated the efficacy of an aggressive nutrition delivery protocol. The following protocol was implemented: initiation of tube feeds within 4 hours, acceleration to goal rate within 8 hours, and tolerance of gastric residual volumes of 400 ml. Patients on the protocol formed the study group whereas patients admitted immediately before implementation served as controls for a study period of 7 days after admission. Outcome variables included ileus, prokinetic medication use, intensive care unit and overall length of stay, ventilator days and mortality. Variables were compared using bivariate analysis. The 42 study subjects and 34 controls were similar at baseline. Time to initiation was similar (6.8 vs 9.4 hours; P = .226), however, goal rate was achieved much sooner in the study group (11.2 vs 20.9 hours; P < .001). Number of hours spent at goal was different on days 1 and 2 (6.62 vs 2.74, P = .003 and 17.24 vs 13.18, P = .032) with no difference thereafter. Residual volumes in the study group were higher from day 2 onward, and remained increased throughout the study period (401 vs 234 ml average; P = .449). Clinical ileus was much more common in the study group (8 cases vs 1, P = .037). There was no difference in length of stay or mortality. The protocol was successfully implemented and resulted in early achievement of goal tube feed rates. However, this resulted in tube feed intolerance as manifested by more cases of clinical ileus.
- Subjects :
- Adult
Male
medicine.medical_specialty
Time Factors
Ileus
Acceleration
Burn Units
Risk Assessment
law.invention
Young Adult
Enteral Nutrition
Injury Severity Score
law
Reference Values
Cause of Death
Medicine
Humans
Hospital Mortality
Young adult
Survival rate
Cause of death
Retrospective Studies
business.industry
Rehabilitation
Case-control study
Nutritional Requirements
Retrospective cohort study
Length of Stay
Middle Aged
medicine.disease
Prognosis
Intensive care unit
Surgery
Survival Rate
Treatment Outcome
Anesthesia
Case-Control Studies
Multivariate Analysis
Emergency Medicine
Female
business
Burns
Needs Assessment
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15590488
- Volume :
- 34
- Issue :
- 5
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of burn careresearch : official publication of the American Burn Association
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....7c9ed0a4c3daa4110d62cf7946ef62b7