Low-dose enteral feeding is beneficial during total parenteral nutrition

H C Sax, K A Illig, C K Ryan, D J Hardy, H C Sax, K A Illig, C K Ryan, D J Hardy

Abstract

Background: Enteral support is the preferred feeding route for stressed patients due in part to the provision of gut-specific fuels. In those patients who must be maintained parenterally, small amounts of enteral stimulation might blunt gut atrophy and lead to improvement in host defense mechanisms decreasing macromolecular and/or bacterial translocation (BT).

Methods: Forty-eight rats were infused with TPN for 9 days, and were randomized to receive 0%, 6%, 12%, or 25% of their calories as partial enteral nutrition (PEN) in an isocaloric, isonitrogenous fashion. Twenty-four hours before harvest animals were gavaged with lactulose and urinary excretion quantified. At harvest, mesenteric lymph nodes were cultured to assess BT and intestinal histology determined.

Results: Provision of as little as 25% of total calories PEN improved nitrogen balance and reduced BT, in a dose dependent fashion. It did not alter TPN-associated increased macromolecular lactulose permeability (4.4% +/- 1.0%).

Conclusion: Concurrent small amounts of PEN, aimed to support the gut's metabolic needs, are beneficial during periods of prolonged TPN.

Source: PubMed

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