Table 1 |
||
|
Nutritional strategy in patients with acute kidney injury in the Department of Intensive Care Medicine, University Hospital Leuven |
||
|
Reference(s) |
||
|
|
||
|
Protocolized prescription for artificial nutrition |
Caloric target: 24, 30, and 36 kcal/kg protein included, based on age, gender, and corrected ideal body weight. |
|
|
Target and energy provisions of previous day shown in Patient Data Management System. Energy from sources other than PN is included. |
||
|
'Early' EN |
EN is initiated within 36 hours from admission unless (a) formal contraindication (for example, high gastrointestinal fistula, intestinal ischemia, and high-dose vasopressor) or (b) the patient is starting to eat. |
|
|
Progressive increase of EN dose during hospitalization |
Day 2: 200 to 500 kcal |
[60] |
|
Day 3: 700 to 900 kcal |
||
|
Day 4: 1,100 to 1,300 kcal |
||
|
Day 5: 1,500 to 1,700 kcal |
||
|
PN: according to randomization in ongoing EPaNIC trial |
Early PN: within 48 hours of initiation of standard PN to complement EN up to 100% of caloric target, unless patient is starting to eat. |
|
|
Late PN: no PN during the first week after admission on the ICU. |
[51] |
|
|
Standardized formulations |
Commercially available ready-to-use EN and PN preparations. |
[91] |
|
Composition of EN and PN |
60% to 70% dextrose, 30% to 40% lipids. |
|
|
Lipids less than 1 g lipids/kg body weight per day. |
||
|
Proteins: 0.8 to 1.2 g/kg body weight per day. |
||
|
No adaptation for acute renal failure and/or CRRT. |
||
|
Use of glucose-containing replacement fluid (physiological concentration) in CRRT. |
||
|
Parenteral lipid restriction |
If plasma triglycerides are greater than 300 mg/dL. Lipid-free PN is administered and lipids are added once weekly. |
|
|
Glucose administration in binary PN should not exceed 5 g/kg per day. |
||
|
Volume and electrolyte restriction |
In case of fluid overload, renal replacement therapy will be started rather than PN or EN volume reduced. |
[6] |
|
Concentrated EN is used only during prolonged critical illness with intermittent hemodialysis. |
||
|
Electrolyte-free standard formulations are used on indication. |
||
|
Strict glycemic control |
All patients in the ICU receive insulin targeted at blood glucose levels of 80 to 110 mg/dL. |
|
|
Vitamins and trace elements |
All patients requiring nutritional support receive recommended daily allowances of parenteral trace elements and vitamins until they receive more than 1,600 kcal standard enteral formulation. |
|
|
During severe hepatic failure, doses of manganese and copper are reduced to once weekly. |
[127] |
|
|
Immunonutrition |
No routine use of enteral or parenteral immunonutrients. |
[85] |
|
Frequent monitoring of electrolytes and lactate |
Potassium, bicarbonate, and lactate every 4 hours. |
|
|
Sodium, chlorine, magnesium, and phosphorous every 24 hours. |
||
|
|
||
|
CRRT, continuous renal replacement therapy; EN, enteral nutrition; ICU, intensive care unit; PN, parenteral nutrition. |
||
|
Casaer et al. Critical Care 2008 12:222 doi:10.1186/cc6945 |
||