Enteral Nutrition Guidelines and Patients' Outcomes
- Conditions
- Enteral Nutrition
- Interventions
- Combination Product: enteral nutrition guidelines
- Registration Number
- NCT05900323
- Lead Sponsor
- Mansoura University
- Brief Summary
Critically ill patients often exhibit a hypermetabolic state and increased energy requirements due to their critical illnesses. Those patients cannot meet their nutritional requirements through oral feeding. Therefore, the initiation of enteral nutrition (EN) is an essential intervention to fulfill the body's dietary and physiological requirements. Despite advancements in the techniques and equipment used for EN, inadequate nutritional intake is a significant issue for CIPs. It requires special attention to prevent muscle wasting and overfeeding. Critical care nurses have a key role in applying the proper nutritional care for CIPs. They are responsible for inserting and maintaining the feeding tube, delivering the feeds, and avoiding complications associated with EN.
- Detailed Description
Enteral nutrition is a proactive therapeutic strategy that can be provided by nasogastric or nasoduodenal tubes, gastrostomy, and jejunostomy. It is indicated for the patient who has the digestive capability but is unable to consume enough feeding by mouth. Patients with profound anorexia or severe stress that greatly increases their nutritional needs also require EN. On the other hand, EN is contraindicated for patients with refractory diarrhea, vomiting, bowel obstruction, and when the gastrointestinal tract is not intact.
Despite advancements in the techniques and equipment used for EN, inadequate nutritional intake is a significant issue for CIPs. It requires special attention to prevent muscle wasting and overfeeding. Underfeeding has detrimental effects on patients' clinical outcomes such as delayed wound healing, increased infectious complications, prolonged mechanical ventilation and length of stay in the ICU, and higher mortality rates. Adequate patient nutrition depends on specific interventions or protocols used for planning, initiation, and detection of its complications. Therefore, various nutritional support guidelines are being continuously developed and enriched to help clinical workers improve their nutritional care practice and patients' outcomes.
While the process of administering EN may appear less complex compared with parenteral nutrition, serious complications, and death can result due to potential adverse events occurring throughout the process of ordering, administering, and monitoring EN. These events include reports of metabolic abnormalities, bronchopulmonary aspiration, feeding intolerance, and drug-nutrient interactions.
Because of the significant effects of nursing care on all aspects of EN delivery and management, accurate feeding procedure and avoidance of its associated complications should be considered as a crucial component of nurses' practice. An extensive review of the literature revealed that the patient's clinical outcomes were not evaluated in most studies in Egypt; however, CIPs have a high risk of developing malnutrition or feeding intolerance which is associated with worse clinical outcomes. This inspired us to carry out this study to cover this area.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- NOT_YET_RECRUITING
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 68
- Adult patients ≥ 18 years old.
- Hemodynamically stable patients.
- Patients who are unable to maintain volitional oral intake within 24 hours of admission.
- Signs of feeding intolerance (nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, or high gastric residual volume).
- Contraindications to EN such as active bleeding, bowel obstruction, bowel ischemia, or paralytic ileus.
- Signs of clinical shock (low blood pressure, rapid breathing, rapid weak pulse, and decreased urine output).
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Enteral Nutrition Guidelines Group enteral nutrition guidelines It will include 34 patients who will receive enteral nutrition guidelines.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Signs of feeding intolerance assessment Signs of feeding intolerance will be assessed for seven days. Absence of vomiting, diarrhea, constipation, abdominal distention, and Normal gastric residual volume.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method