Recomendaciones para el soporte nutricional y metabólico especializado del paciente crítico: Actualización. Consenso SEMICYUC-SENPE: Cirugía del aparato digestivo
2011
Gastrointestinal surgery and critical illness place
tremendous stress on the body, resulting in a series of
metabolic changes that may lead to severe malnutrition,
which in turn can increase postsurgical complications
and morbidity and mortality and prolong the hospital
length of stay.
In these patients, parenteral nutrition is the most
widely used form of nutritional support, but administration
of enteral nutrition early in the postoperative period
is effective and well tolerated, reducing infectious complications,
improving wound healing and reducing length of
hospital stay.
Calorie-protein requirements do not differ from those
in other critically-ill patients and depend on the patient’s
underlying process and degree of metabolic stress.
In patients intolerant to enteral nutrition, especially if
the intolerance is due to increased gastric residual volume,
prokinetic agents can be used to optimize calorie intake.
When proximal sutures are used, tubes allowing early
jejunal feeding should be used.
Pharmaconutrition is indicated in these patients, who
benefit from enteral administration of arginine, omega 3
and RNA, as well as parenteral glutamine supplementation.
Parenteral nutrition should be started in patients with
absolute contraindication for use of the gastrointestinal
tract or as complementary nutrition if adequate energy
intake is not achieved through the enteral route.
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