Abstract:
The critically ill patient exhibits an endocrine and metabolic response to stress which is
characterized by high resting energy expenditure, accelerated proteolysis, lipolysis
manifesting with hyperglycemia, a hyperdynamic cardiovascular reaction with a high
cardiac output, increased oxygen consumption, high body temperature, and decreased
peripheral vascular resistance. Provision of a large glucose-derived calorie load tends to
accentuate these reactions and increase the degree of hyperglycaemia. A hypocalorichyperproteic
regimen which is provided only during the first days of the flow phase of
the adaptive response to injury, sepsis, or critical illness is considered best.
Enteral nutrition is indicated when there is an inability to ingest adequate nutrients by
mouth and when the gastrointestinal tract is normal. The commonly used polymeric
feeding solutions provide a mixture of nutrients similar to that encountered in the normal
diet, usually as an iso-osmolar low residue solution. Because lactose intolerance may be
encountered during critical illness, most formulations are lactose free.
If gastric emptying is delayed prokinetic agents are tried before a transpyloric tube or
enterostomy tube feeding is considered. Diarrhoea caused by enteral pathogens may
require specific treatment. If pathogens are excluded then fibre and probiotics may be
considered.
Intravenous nutrition plays an important supportive role in critically ill patients who have
prolonged gastrointestinal failure. Energy substrates consist of concentrated glucose and
lipid solutions and nitrogen requirement is supplied as L-amino acids which is a solution
of essential amino acids with a few of the non-essential amino acids. The water soluble
vitamins and vitamin K should supplement intravenous nutrition with amounts to meet
the recommended daily allowance. Additional supplementation of thiamine, folic acid
and ascorbic acid are often administered. Apart from zinc, the body stores of the essential
trace elements of copper, iodine, iron, manganese, cobalt, selenium, chromium, fluoride
and molybdenum are usually adequate to meet the needs of patients requiring parenteral
nutrition for less than 3 months.