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KMID : 0604020120270030157
Korean Journal of Critical Care Medicine
2012 Volume.27 No. 3 p.157 ~ p.164
Nutrition Support in the Intensive Care Unit of 6 Korean Tertiary Teaching Hospitals: A National Multicenter Observational Study
Lee Song-Mi

Kim Seon-Hyeung
Kim Yoon
Kim Eun-Mee
Baek Hee-Joon
Lee Seung-Min
Lee Ho-Sun
Chang Chul-Ho
Shin Cheung-Soo
Abstract
Background: Malnutrition is a frequent nutritional problem among ICU patients, and their nutritional status is known to affect clinical prognosis. We conducted this study to examine nutritional status and actual nutrition delivery in the ICU patients and its relations to clinical outcomes.

Methods: This study was a multicenter retrospective observational study based on the medical records of 163 patients admitted to ICU of tertiary teaching hospitals in Korea. We included the patients who were treated with mechanical ventilation for 3 or more days and received enteral or parenteral nutrition.

Results: According to albumin and total lymphocyte count levels, 54.6% of the subjects were moderately or severely malnourished. Mean percentage of calorie and protein delivery to estimated needs for 10 days were 55.8 ¡¾ 29.3% and 46.1 ¡¾ 30.1%, respectively. While parenteral nutrition (PN) started at 1.6 ¡¾ 1.4 days after admission, enteral nutrition (EN) did at 3.6 ¡¾ 2.1 days. Days to PN and EN start, the calorie and protein amount via EN or PN were significantly different among 6 hospitals. No clinical outcomes differed by the levels of calorie or protein delivery. In-hospital mortality was significantly higher in the severely malnourished group at admission as compared to the other 2 groups (54.3% vs. 31.2% vs. 27.7%, p £¼ 0.05).

Conclusions: Malnutrition prevalence is high among Korean intensive care unit patients, but current nutritional therapy practice is inconsistent across institutions and far below the international guidelines. Systematic efforts should be made to develop nutritional support guidelines for Korean ICU patients.
KEYWORD
critical illness, enteral nutrition, intensive care unit, malnutrition, nutrition support, parenteral nutrition
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