Nutrition in Critical Care
Cambridge University Press, 3/6/2014
EAN 9781107669017, ISBN10: 1107669014
Paperback, 261 pages, 23.1 x 15.5 x 1.5 cm
Language: English
The association between poor nutrition and disease is well established. Integrating nutritional sciences into clinical practice offers a valuable tool to improve patient care and prognosis, particularly within the critical care environment where nutrition is often overlooked. However, optimizing nutritional support offers a safe and simple adjunct to more expensive and technologically challenging treatments for these complex patients. This volume provides comprehensive guidelines for the nutritional support of critically ill patients and is valuable reading for doctors, nurses, dieticians and practitioners working within the critical care environment. It begins by discussing nutritional physiology and patient assessment, providing an essential foundation for planning and managing the dietary requirements of critically ill patients. Internationally-recognized authors present evidence-based guidelines for managing various groups, including surgical patients, patients with burns, and patients with renal failure. The implications of enteral vs. parenteral nutrition, timing of nutritional support, therapeutic strategies, and management of complications are discussed.
Preface
Part I. General Concepts
1. Nutritional physiology of the critically ill patient David C. Frankenfield
2. Nutritional assessment of the critically ill patient Mario Siervo and Carla Prado
3. Body composition assessment of the critically ill patient Ying Ji and Dympna Gallagher
4. Micronutrient and vitamin physiology and requirements in critically ill patients Timothy Eden, Minha Rajput-Ray and Sumantra Ray
Part II. Nutritional Delivery and Dietetics
5. Enteral and parenteral feeding protocols Malissa Warren and Robert Martindale
6. Commercial nutritional enteral and parenteral formulations in critical care J. A. Silversides, Stephen T. Webb and Andrew J. Ferguson
7. Nutritional supplements in critically ill patients Shaul Lev, Ilya Kagan and Pierre Singer
Part III. General Problems in Critical Care
8. Gastrointestinal disturbances in critically ill patients Andrew Hetreed and Peter Faber
9. Fluid and electrolyte management in critical care medicine Nils Siegenthaler, Paolo Merlani and Andreas Perren
10. Hormonal responses and nutritional management of adults in critical care units John A. Tayek
Part IV. Nutritional Support for Specific Conditions and Pathologies
11. Nutritional support of critically ill burns patients Bjarne F. Alsbjoern
12. Nutritional support of critically ill neurosurgical patients Roland N. Dickerson
13. Nutritional support of critically ill immuno-compromised patients Peter K. Linden
14. Nutritional support of critically ill cancer patients Wilson I. Gonsalves and Aminah Jatoi
15. Nutritional support of critically ill patients after gastrointestinal surgery Shay Nanthakumaran and Jan O. Jansen
16. Nutritional support of critically ill patients with renal failure Patricia Wiesen and Jean-Charles Preiser
17. Nutritional support of critically ill patients with liver and pancreatic failure Euan Thomson and Alastair Lee
18. Nutritional support and implications for critically ill patients with sepsis Michael H. Hooper and Paul E. Marik
19. Nutrition in cardiac intensive care Peter McCanny, Danny Collins and Andrew A. Klein
20. Nutritional support of critically ill patients with respiratory disorders Krista L. Turner
21. Nutritional support of critically ill organ transplantation patients Andrew J. Kerwin and Michael S. Nussbaum
22. Nutritional management of anorexia in critical care Maria Gabriella Gentile
23. Nutritional support of critically ill obese patients Dong Wook Kim and Caroline M. Apovian
Index.