parenteral support
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Author(s):  
Siddhartha M. Oke ◽  
Jeremy M. Nightingale ◽  
Suzanne C. Donnelly ◽  
Mani Naghibi ◽  
James Willsmore ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 105 (7S) ◽  
pp. S33-S33
Author(s):  
Iyer K ◽  
Mercer D ◽  
Pfeffer D ◽  
Brøsted Zimmermann L ◽  
Berner-Hansen M ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
SophieMaria Mathiesen ◽  
KristianAsp Fuglsang ◽  
Giovanna Ranzato ◽  
Thomas Scheike ◽  
PalleBekker Jeppesen

2021 ◽  
pp. flgastro-2018-101108
Author(s):  
Jeremy M D Nightingale

A high-output stoma (HOS) or fistula is when small bowel output causes water, sodium and often magnesium depletion. This tends to occur when the output is >1.5 -2.0 L/24 hours though varies according to the amount of food/drink taken orally. An HOS occurs in up to 31% of small bowel stomas. A high-output enterocutaneous fistula may, if from the proximal small bowel, behave in the same way and its fluid management will be the same as for an HOS.The clinical assessment consists of excluding causes other than a short bowel and treating them (especially partial or intermittent obstruction). A contrast follow through study gives an approximate measurement of residual small intestinal length (if not known from surgery) and may show the quality of the remaining small bowel.If HOS is due to a short bowel, the first step is to rehydrate the patient so stopping severe thirst. When thirst has resolved and renal function returned to normal, oral hypotonic fluid is restricted and a glucose-saline solution is sipped. Medication to slow transit (loperamide often in high dose) or to reduce secretions (omeprazole for gastric acid) may be helpful. Subcutaneous fluid (usually saline with added magnesium) may be given before intravenous fluids though can take 10–12 hours to infuse. Generally parenteral support is needed when less than 100 cm of functioning jejunum remains. If there is defunctioned bowel in situ, consideration should be given to bringing it back into continuity.


Author(s):  
Kristina Chen ◽  
Francisca Joly ◽  
Fan Mu ◽  
Sneha S. Kelkar ◽  
Clement Olivier ◽  
...  

Nutrients ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (11) ◽  
pp. 3426
Author(s):  
Torid Jacob ◽  
Aenne Glass ◽  
Maria Witte ◽  
Johannes Reiner ◽  
Georg Lamprecht

Intestinal failure (IF) requires parenteral support (PS) substituting energy, water, and electrolytes to compensate intestinal losses and replenish deficits. Convalescence, adaptation, and reconstructive surgery facilitate PS reduction. We analyzed the effect of changes of PS on body mass index (BMI) in early adult IF. Energy, volume, and sodium content of PS and BMI were collected at the initial contact (FIRST), the time of maximal PS and BMI (MAX) and the last contact (LAST). Patients were categorized based on functional anatomy: small bowel enterostomy—group 1, jejuno-colic anastomosis—group 2. Analysis of variance was used to test the relative impact of changes in energy, volume, or sodium. Total of 50 patients were followed for 596 days. Although energy, volume, and sodium support were already high at FIRST, we increased PS to MAX, which was accompanied by a significant BMI increase. Thereafter PS could be reduced significantly, leading to a small BMI decrease in group 1, but not in group 2. Increased sodium support had a stronger impact on BMI than energy or volume. Total of 13 patients were weaned. Dynamic PS adjustments are required in the early phase of adult IF. Vigorous sodium support acts as an independent factor.


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