Nutrition and outcomes in venovenous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation: An observational cohort study
CONCLUSION: Higher protein intake was associated with reduced mortality. Optimal energy targets for patients receiving ECMO are currently unknown and warrant further study.PMID:38375866 | DOI:10.1002/ncp.11132 (Source: Nutrition in Clinical Practice)
Source: Nutrition in Clinical Practice - February 20, 2024 Category: Nutrition Authors: Stacy Pelekhaty Julie Gessler Siddhartha Dante Nicholas Rector Samuel Galvagno Stephen Stachnik Joseph Rabin Ali Tabatabai Source Type: research

Nutrition and outcomes in venovenous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation: An observational cohort study
CONCLUSION: Higher protein intake was associated with reduced mortality. Optimal energy targets for patients receiving ECMO are currently unknown and warrant further study.PMID:38375866 | DOI:10.1002/ncp.11132 (Source: Nutrition in Clinical Practice)
Source: Nutrition in Clinical Practice - February 20, 2024 Category: Nutrition Authors: Stacy Pelekhaty Julie Gessler Siddhartha Dante Nicholas Rector Samuel Galvagno Stephen Stachnik Joseph Rabin Ali Tabatabai Source Type: research

Nutrition and outcomes in venovenous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation: An observational cohort study
CONCLUSION: Higher protein intake was associated with reduced mortality. Optimal energy targets for patients receiving ECMO are currently unknown and warrant further study.PMID:38375866 | DOI:10.1002/ncp.11132 (Source: Nutrition in Clinical Practice)
Source: Nutrition in Clinical Practice - February 20, 2024 Category: Nutrition Authors: Stacy Pelekhaty Julie Gessler Siddhartha Dante Nicholas Rector Samuel Galvagno Stephen Stachnik Joseph Rabin Ali Tabatabai Source Type: research

Nutrition and outcomes in venovenous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation: An observational cohort study
CONCLUSION: Higher protein intake was associated with reduced mortality. Optimal energy targets for patients receiving ECMO are currently unknown and warrant further study.PMID:38375866 | DOI:10.1002/ncp.11132 (Source: Nutrition in Clinical Practice)
Source: Nutrition in Clinical Practice - February 20, 2024 Category: Nutrition Authors: Stacy Pelekhaty Julie Gessler Siddhartha Dante Nicholas Rector Samuel Galvagno Stephen Stachnik Joseph Rabin Ali Tabatabai Source Type: research

Nutrition and outcomes in venovenous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation: An observational cohort study
CONCLUSION: Higher protein intake was associated with reduced mortality. Optimal energy targets for patients receiving ECMO are currently unknown and warrant further study.PMID:38375866 | DOI:10.1002/ncp.11132 (Source: Nutrition in Clinical Practice)
Source: Nutrition in Clinical Practice - February 20, 2024 Category: Nutrition Authors: Stacy Pelekhaty Julie Gessler Siddhartha Dante Nicholas Rector Samuel Galvagno Stephen Stachnik Joseph Rabin Ali Tabatabai Source Type: research

Nutrition and outcomes in venovenous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation: An observational cohort study
CONCLUSION: Higher protein intake was associated with reduced mortality. Optimal energy targets for patients receiving ECMO are currently unknown and warrant further study.PMID:38375866 | DOI:10.1002/ncp.11132 (Source: Nutrition in Clinical Practice)
Source: Nutrition in Clinical Practice - February 20, 2024 Category: Nutrition Authors: Stacy Pelekhaty Julie Gessler Siddhartha Dante Nicholas Rector Samuel Galvagno Stephen Stachnik Joseph Rabin Ali Tabatabai Source Type: research

Nutrition and outcomes in venovenous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation: An observational cohort study
CONCLUSION: Higher protein intake was associated with reduced mortality. Optimal energy targets for patients receiving ECMO are currently unknown and warrant further study.PMID:38375866 | DOI:10.1002/ncp.11132 (Source: Nutrition in Clinical Practice)
Source: Nutrition in Clinical Practice - February 20, 2024 Category: Nutrition Authors: Stacy Pelekhaty Julie Gessler Siddhartha Dante Nicholas Rector Samuel Galvagno Stephen Stachnik Joseph Rabin Ali Tabatabai Source Type: research

Nutrition and outcomes in venovenous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation: An observational cohort study
CONCLUSION: Higher protein intake was associated with reduced mortality. Optimal energy targets for patients receiving ECMO are currently unknown and warrant further study.PMID:38375866 | DOI:10.1002/ncp.11132 (Source: Nutrition in Clinical Practice)
Source: Nutrition in Clinical Practice - February 20, 2024 Category: Nutrition Authors: Stacy Pelekhaty Julie Gessler Siddhartha Dante Nicholas Rector Samuel Galvagno Stephen Stachnik Joseph Rabin Ali Tabatabai Source Type: research

Completion of a Nutrition-Focused Physical Exam with hospitalized adults and pediatric patients: Secondary analysis of a prospective cohort study
CONCLUSION: RDNs evaluated NFPE components for a high proportion (>80%) of hospitalized patients.PMID:38372592 | DOI:10.1002/ncp.11137 (Source: Nutrition in Clinical Practice)
Source: Nutrition in Clinical Practice - February 19, 2024 Category: Nutrition Authors: Elizabeth Yakes Jimenez Erin Lamers-Johnson Julie M Long Beth A Mordarski Xingya Ma Alison Steiber Source Type: research

Evidence-based practice attitudes and nutrition support guideline knowledge between holders and nonholders of the Certified Nutrition Support Clinician credential
CONCLUSIONS: Regardless of holding the CNSC credential, EBPAS-15 scores indicated respondents had positive EBP attitudes. CNSC holders had significantly higher knowledge scores of recent nutrition support EBP guidelines compared with non-CNSC credential holders. Positive EBP attitudes are a precursor to clinical decision-making, but future research should determine the use of guidelines in clinical practice.PMID:38366972 | DOI:10.1002/ncp.11136 (Source: Nutrition in Clinical Practice)
Source: Nutrition in Clinical Practice - February 17, 2024 Category: Nutrition Authors: Lea Steiner Joachim Sackey Deborah Cohen Rebecca Brody Source Type: research

Evidence-based practice attitudes and nutrition support guideline knowledge between holders and nonholders of the Certified Nutrition Support Clinician credential
CONCLUSIONS: Regardless of holding the CNSC credential, EBPAS-15 scores indicated respondents had positive EBP attitudes. CNSC holders had significantly higher knowledge scores of recent nutrition support EBP guidelines compared with non-CNSC credential holders. Positive EBP attitudes are a precursor to clinical decision-making, but future research should determine the use of guidelines in clinical practice.PMID:38366972 | DOI:10.1002/ncp.11136 (Source: Nutrition in Clinical Practice)
Source: Nutrition in Clinical Practice - February 17, 2024 Category: Nutrition Authors: Lea Steiner Joachim Sackey Deborah Cohen Rebecca Brody Source Type: research

Nutrition therapy in critically ill patients with severe acute pancreatitis
Nutr Clin Pract. 2024 Feb 15. doi: 10.1002/ncp.11135. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTA significant proportion of patients (10%-20%) with acute pancreatitis develop severe acute pancreatitis characterized by pancreatic necrosis, systemic inflammation, and organ failure, commonly requiring intensive care unit (ICU) admission. In this specific population, nutrition therapy is more challenging than that in the general ICU population, primarily because of inevitable gastrointestinal involvement by pancreatic inflammation. In this review, we discussed several key aspects of nutrition therapy in this population, including key path...
Source: Nutrition in Clinical Practice - February 15, 2024 Category: Nutrition Authors: Jia-Kui Sun Cheng Lv Lin Gao Wenjian Mao Weiqin Li Lu Ke Source Type: research

Nutrition therapy in critically ill patients with severe acute pancreatitis
Nutr Clin Pract. 2024 Feb 15. doi: 10.1002/ncp.11135. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTA significant proportion of patients (10%-20%) with acute pancreatitis develop severe acute pancreatitis characterized by pancreatic necrosis, systemic inflammation, and organ failure, commonly requiring intensive care unit (ICU) admission. In this specific population, nutrition therapy is more challenging than that in the general ICU population, primarily because of inevitable gastrointestinal involvement by pancreatic inflammation. In this review, we discussed several key aspects of nutrition therapy in this population, including key path...
Source: Nutrition in Clinical Practice - February 15, 2024 Category: Nutrition Authors: Jia-Kui Sun Cheng Lv Lin Gao Wenjian Mao Weiqin Li Lu Ke Source Type: research

Nutrition therapy in critically ill patients with severe acute pancreatitis
Nutr Clin Pract. 2024 Feb 15. doi: 10.1002/ncp.11135. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTA significant proportion of patients (10%-20%) with acute pancreatitis develop severe acute pancreatitis characterized by pancreatic necrosis, systemic inflammation, and organ failure, commonly requiring intensive care unit (ICU) admission. In this specific population, nutrition therapy is more challenging than that in the general ICU population, primarily because of inevitable gastrointestinal involvement by pancreatic inflammation. In this review, we discussed several key aspects of nutrition therapy in this population, including key path...
Source: Nutrition in Clinical Practice - February 15, 2024 Category: Nutrition Authors: Jia-Kui Sun Cheng Lv Lin Gao Wenjian Mao Weiqin Li Lu Ke Source Type: research

High prevalence of muscle weakness and probable sarcopenia in patients with inflammatory bowel disease
CONCLUSION: One-third of the patients younger than 65 years with IBD had probable sarcopenia, defined as low muscle strength, whereas the incidence of confirmed sarcopenia remained relatively low.PMID:38321633 | DOI:10.1002/ncp.11125 (Source: Nutrition in Clinical Practice)
Source: Nutrition in Clinical Practice - February 7, 2024 Category: Nutrition Authors: Ilkay Ergenc Chasan Ismail Basa Alper Uzum Sevval Sahin Haluk Tar ık Kani Rahmi Aslan Asl ı Tufan Özgür Kasımay Özlen Atuğ Ye şim Özen Alahdab Source Type: research