Impact of Nutrition Support Team on Postoperative Nutritional Status and Outcome of Patients with Congenital Gastrointestinal Anomalies

Parisa zarei Shargh, Emad Yuzbashian Yuzbashian, Atieh Mehdizadeh-Hakkak, zahra khorasanchi, Abdolreza Norouzy, Gholamreza Khademi, Bahareh Imani

Abstract


ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND:

The aim of this study was to evaluate postoperative nutritional status in patients who underwent operations due to congenital gastrointestinal anomalies in surgical neonatal intensive care units (NICUs) and to investigate the role of nutrition support teams (NSTs) on the outcome.

METHODS:

 A retrospective clinical study was carried out at two NICUs in Dr. Sheikh Pediatric Hospital, Mashhad, Iran. One of the NICUs was supported by NST and the other was not. A total of 120 patients were included through a non-random simple sampling. Different variables such as age, sex, prematurity, type of anomaly, birth weight, use of vasoactive drugs, weight gain in NICU, length of NICU stay, postoperative enteral nutrition initiation, duration of mechanical ventilation, mortality rate, maximum of blood sugar, the amount of calorie delivered to the calorie requirement ratio, and distribution of energy from enteral or parenteral roots were compared between the patients of two NICUs.

RESULTS:

 Median weight gain and the amount of calorie delivered during NICU stay in subjects of NST-supported NICU was significantly more than other NICU. There was no significant difference in the length of NICU stay, enteral nutrition initiation after the operation, ventilation days, and percent of mortality between the two groups.  The percentage of enteral feeding was also increased by about 2.8%, which was not significant.

CONCLUSION:

NST could increase post-operative weight gain and calorie delivery in patients as well as providing an increase in enteral feeding rather than parenteral.

 

 

 

 

 

 


Keywords


Nutritional support; Digestive system abnormalities; Nutritional status; Neonatal intensive care units

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