Quotes, notes and references
"Up-to-date, practical information from dynamic, knowledgable speakers; overall, a valuable learning experience worth the trade-off of being indoors on a rare sunny Saturday in October; I feel inspired, challenged and better informed."
This was my evalution of the recent Education Day I attended. Listening to expert speakers in a supportive, collegial atmosphere boosted my morale as well as knowledge. The next step: translate this into daily practice.
So this week I've been reviewing my handouts. I thought I'd post some quotes, notes and key references pertaining to best practice in nutrition support (enteral and parenteral feeding) and vitamin-mineral supplementation.
Session: Enteral feeding: the practice vs the evidence (Carol Rees Parrish, MS, RD)
"To date, adequately powered studies have not been conducted to demonstrate a significant relationship between GRV [gastric residual volume] and aspiration pneumonia."
"Good evidence exists for maintaining a backrest elevation of greater than 30 degrees to decrease gastric reflux and aspiration events."
Parrish CR, McClave SA. Checking Gastric Residual Volumes: A Practice in Search of a Science? Practical Gastroenterology 2008; XXXII(10):33-47 (PDF)
Session: Parenteral feeding: passé in patients with pancreatitis? (Carol Rees Parrish, MS, RD)
"Jejunal feeding is safe, effective, low risk; best route (NJ, N-G-J vs PEG/J, surgical J) has yet to be determined by a prospective controlled trial."
Krenitsky, J., Makola D., Parrish, C. Parenteral Nutrition in Pancreatitis is Passé: But Are We Ready for Gastric Feeding? A Critical Evaluation of the Literature-Part I (PDF)
Krenitsky J, Makola D, Parrish CR. Pancreatitis Part II - Revenge of the Cyst: A Practical Guide to Jejunal Feeding (PDF)
"In patients with predicted severe acute pancreatitis, probiotic prophylaxis with this combination of probiotic strains did not reduce the risk of infectious complications and was associated with an increased risk of mortality.
Probiotics can no longer be considered to be harmless adjuncts to enteral nutrition, especially in critically ill patients or patients at risk for non-occlusive mesenteric ischemia."
Session: Drug-induced nutrient depletion and supplementation -- Literature picks (Liz da Silva, RD)
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