Comparison of nutritional adequacy in adult patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome with and without veno-venous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation: a single-center experience

Author:

ÇALIŞKAN Gülbahar1ORCID,KELEBEK GİRGİN Nermin1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care, Ministry of Health, Bursa City Hospital, Bursa, Turkey

Abstract

Objectives: Limited data is available regarding nutrition practices for patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) who are also receiving veno-venous-extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (VV-ECMO). The aim of the study was to describe the nutritional status of patients receiving VV-ECMO and compared with those who did not. Methods: Patients (>18 years-old) diagnosed with ARDS who received VV-ECMO (≥72 hours) were included in this retrospective study. The daily achievement of an energy target (%) and average protein intake during 2 weeks after initiation of VV-ECMO were calculated. Adequate feeding was defined as achieving 80-110% of the calculated target. The duration before initiating parenteral (PN) and enteral nutrition (EN), feeding route, length of intensive care, and hospital stay were evaluated. Data was compared between groups. Results: In this study, 24 patients were included, of whom 12 received VV-ECMO. EN was started in a median 1.5 and 1 days in the VV-ECMO and non-ECMO groups, respectively. In the VV-ECMO group, 75% of the patients could achieve nutritional adequacy (>80% energy goal) and 83.3% in the non-ECMO group (p = 0.615). PN being required in 4 (33.3%) patients who received VV-ECMO and 3 (25%) patients who did not (p = 0254). Ten of all patients experienced inadequate EN because of hemodynamic instability (n = 3), prone position (n=4), gastric distension (n = 2) and diarrhea (n = 1). Conclusions: VV-ECMO was not an obstacle for adequate nutrition, but prone position and hemodynamic instability were common causes of enteral feeding interruptions and inadequate energy delivery.

Publisher

The European Research Journal

Subject

General Medicine

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