Safety and intestinal tolerance of high-dose enteral antioxidants and glutamine peptides after upper gastrointestinal surgery.
Journal: 2005/May - European Journal of Clinical Nutrition
ISSN: 0954-3007
Abstract:
OBJECTIVE
Safety and intestinal tolerance of an early high-dose enteral administration of antioxidative vitamins, trace elements, and glutamine dipeptides.
METHODS
open intervention trial.
METHODS
Two university teaching hospitals.
METHODS
A total of 14 patients requiring jejunal feeding (64+/-14 y).
METHODS
A measure of 500 ml/day Intestamin (FreseniusKabi: 250 kcal/1.050 kJ, 300 microg selenium, 20 mg zinc, 400 mug chromium, 1500 mg vitamin C, 500 mg vitamin E, 10 mg beta-carotene, 30 g glutamine) for 5 days beginning 6 h after surgery. Parenteral/enteral nutrition was provided to achieve energy target (25 kcal/kg/day).
METHODS
Intestinal complaints, plasma nutrients, and glutathione.
RESULTS
Only minor signs of nausea, hiccups, flatulence (3/14). Plasma micronutrients (except beta-carotene) postoperatively decreased and increased to normal on day 5. Extracellular glutamine remained low (preop: 520+/-94; d1: 357+/-67; d5: 389+/-79 micromol/l); total glutathione decreased (d1: 9.4+/-3.8; d5: 3.6+/-2.5 micromol/l).
CONCLUSIONS
Study feed is well tolerated and metabolically safe representing a valuable tool for targeted pharmaconutrient supply.
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