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Managing adult patients who need home parenteral nutrition

Managing adult patients who need home parenteral nutrition
Managing adult patients who need home parenteral nutrition
Patients with intestinal failure—defined as failure to maintain protein-energy balance, fluid balance, electrolyte balance, or micronutrient balance when eating a normal diet as a result of surgery, bowel disease, or a congenital defect—require parenteral nutrition (see box 1 for full definition). Since its introduction in 1967, intravenous nutrition administered in the home has been the mainstay of treatment for patients with long term intestinal failure. Home parenteral nutrition is a clinically important way to supply certain patients with their long term nutritional requirements, but high rates of complications are a worry. Although patients’ survival largely depends on the underlying disease, adverse events related to venous access and metabolic disturbances associated with the delivery of parenteral nutrition may compromise quality of life. We provide an overview of the indications for and delivery of home parenteral nutrition and discuss advances that promise to limit complications and improve treatment outcomes. This review is based largely on recent guidelines and on observational evidence
0959-8138
696-701
Wanten, Geert
fd31d4e8-e451-4d6e-b3ef-78ecc08c76d9
Calder, Philip C.
1797e54f-378e-4dcb-80a4-3e30018f07a6
Forbes, Alastair
af1986ca-4ac9-4dfd-9b66-106c8e81acf9
Wanten, Geert
fd31d4e8-e451-4d6e-b3ef-78ecc08c76d9
Calder, Philip C.
1797e54f-378e-4dcb-80a4-3e30018f07a6
Forbes, Alastair
af1986ca-4ac9-4dfd-9b66-106c8e81acf9

Wanten, Geert, Calder, Philip C. and Forbes, Alastair (2011) Managing adult patients who need home parenteral nutrition. British Medical Journal, 342, 696-701. (doi:10.1136/bmj.d1447). (PMID:21421667)

Record type: Review

Abstract

Patients with intestinal failure—defined as failure to maintain protein-energy balance, fluid balance, electrolyte balance, or micronutrient balance when eating a normal diet as a result of surgery, bowel disease, or a congenital defect—require parenteral nutrition (see box 1 for full definition). Since its introduction in 1967, intravenous nutrition administered in the home has been the mainstay of treatment for patients with long term intestinal failure. Home parenteral nutrition is a clinically important way to supply certain patients with their long term nutritional requirements, but high rates of complications are a worry. Although patients’ survival largely depends on the underlying disease, adverse events related to venous access and metabolic disturbances associated with the delivery of parenteral nutrition may compromise quality of life. We provide an overview of the indications for and delivery of home parenteral nutrition and discuss advances that promise to limit complications and improve treatment outcomes. This review is based largely on recent guidelines and on observational evidence

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Published date: March 2011

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 192119
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/192119
ISSN: 0959-8138
PURE UUID: df905b0b-4efe-40c8-94aa-495d7befd2d1
ORCID for Philip C. Calder: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6038-710X

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Date deposited: 30 Jun 2011 07:36
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 02:50

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Contributors

Author: Geert Wanten
Author: Alastair Forbes

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