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Current Opinion in Clinical Nutrition and Metabolic Care:
September 2008 - Volume 11 - Issue 5 - p 666-670
doi: 10.1097/MCO.0b013e328308de43
Nutrition and the gastrointestinal tract: Edited by Maria Isabel Toulson Davisson Correia and Herbert Lochs

Special commentary: a call for intensive metabolic support

Mechanick, Jeffrey I; Chiolero, Rene

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Abstract

Purpose of review: This special commentary addresses recent clinical reviews regarding appropriate nutrition and metabolic support in the critical care setting.

Recent findings: There are divergent approaches between North America and Europe for the use of early nutrition support and combined enteral nutrition and parenteral nutrition support possibly due to the commercial availability of specific parenteral nutrients. The advent of intensive insulin therapy has changed the landscape of metabolic support in the intensive care unit, and previous notions about infective risk of parenteral nutrition will need to be re-addressed. Patients with brain failure may benefit from an intensive insulin therapy with a blood glucose target that is higher than that used in patients without brain failure. Patients with heart failure may benefit from the addition of nutritional pharmacology that targets proximate oxidative pathophysiological pathways. Intradialytic parenteral nutrition may be viewed as another form of supplemental parenteral nutrition when enteral nutrition is insufficient in patients on hemodialysis in the intensive care unit.

Summary: It is proposed that intensive metabolic support be routinely implemented in the intensive care unit based on the following steps: intensive insulin therapy with an appropriate blood glucose target, nutrition risk assessment, early and if needed combined enteral nutrition and parenteral nutrition to target 20-25 kcal/kg/day and 1.2-1.5 g protein/kg/day, and nutritional and metabolic monitoring.

© 2008 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Inc.

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