High-Protein Hypocaloric Nutrition for Non-Obese Critically Ill Patients

被引:14
作者
Hoffer, L. John [1 ]
机构
[1] McGill Univ, Lady Davis Inst Med Res, Jewish Gen Hosp, Montreal, PQ, Canada
关键词
amino acids; critical care; critical illness; hypocaloric nutrition; intensive care unit; nutrition assessment; permissive underfeeding; protein requirement; proteins; systemic inflammatory response; INTENSIVE-CARE-UNIT; HOSPITALIZED OBESE-PATIENTS; ENTERAL NUTRITION; CRITICAL ILLNESS; PARENTERAL-NUTRITION; AMERICAN SOCIETY; ENERGY; SUPPORT; MUSCLE; MORTALITY;
D O I
10.1002/ncp.10091
中图分类号
R15 [营养卫生、食品卫生]; TS201 [基础科学];
学科分类号
100403 ;
摘要
High-protein hypocaloric nutrition, tailored to each patient's muscle mass, protein-catabolic severity, and exogenous energy tolerance, is the most plausible nutrition therapy in protein-catabolic critical illness. Sufficient protein provision could mitigate the rapid muscle atrophy characteristic of this disease while providing urgently needed amino acids to the central protein compartment and sites of tissue injury. The protein dose may range from 1.5 to 2.5 g protein (1.8-3.0 g free amino acids)/kg dry body weight per day. Nutrition should be low in energy (approximate to 70% of energy expenditure or approximate to 15 kcal/kg dry body weight per day) because efforts to match energy provision to energy expenditure are physiologically irrational, risk toxic energy overfeeding, and have repeatedly failed in large clinical trials to demonstrate clinical benefit. The American Society for Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition currently suggests high-protein hypocaloric nutrition for obese critically ill patients. Short-term high-protein hypocaloric nutrition is physiologically and clinically sensible for most protein-catabolic critically ill patients, whether obese or not.
引用
收藏
页码:325 / 332
页数:8
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