Breuer J-P, Langelotz C, Paquet P, Weimann A, Schwenk W, Bosse G, Spies C, Bauer H
Charité-Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Klinik für Anästhesiologie m. S. operative Intensivmedizin, Campus Charité Mitte und Campus Virchow-Klinikum, Berlin, Deutschland.
Charité-Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Klinik für Allgemein-, Visceral-, Gefäß- und Thoraxchirurgie, Campus Charité Mitte, Berlin, Deutschland.
Zentralbl Chir. 2013 Dec;138(6):622-9. doi: 10.1055/s-0031-1283777. Epub 2011 Nov 23.
Insufficient nutrition in surgical patients increases perioperative morbidity, mortality, length of stay and therapy costs. Therefore, guidelines declare the integration of nutrition into the overall management as one of the key aspects of perioperative care. This study was conducted to evaluate the current clinical practice of clinical nutrition in surgical departments in Germany.
In 2009 German Surgical Society (DGCH) members in leading positions were surveyed with a standardised online questionnaire concerning their perioperative nutritional routines in elective surgery.
From the addressed physicians n = 156 (6.24 %) answered. Of those, 86.9 % consider the nutritional status of their patients. Only 6 % use standardised nutritional screening tools. Short preoperative fasting for solid and liquid food is practiced by 65 % and 40 %, respectively. After the operation, 65 % allow intake of clear fluids on the day of surgery and 78 % initiate solid food on the day of surgery or the first postoperative day. Oral nutritional supplements are given only "sometimes" or "rarely" by 53.9 % of the respondents.
The low response rate may imply the dilemma that the evidence-based benefit of perioperative nutrition does not meet sufficient interest. Even in case of a positive selection of "pro-nutrition respondents", standardised preoperative malnutrition screening is also rare. Aspects such as shorter perioperative fasting are already practiced more progressively. However, still greater efforts are needed to promote guideline-based clinical nutrition in surgical care in Germany.
外科手术患者营养不足会增加围手术期发病率、死亡率、住院时间和治疗费用。因此,指南将营养纳入整体管理列为围手术期护理的关键方面之一。本研究旨在评估德国外科科室临床营养的当前临床实践情况。
2009年,对德国外科协会(DGCH)担任领导职务的成员进行了一项标准化在线问卷调查,询问他们在择期手术中的围手术期营养常规。
在收到问卷的医生中,有n = 156人(6.24%)回复。其中,86.9%的人会考虑患者的营养状况。只有6%的人使用标准化营养筛查工具。分别有65%和40%的人对固体食物和液体食物实行短时间术前禁食。术后,65%的人允许在手术当天摄入清液,78%的人在手术当天或术后第一天开始给予固体食物。53.9%的受访者只是“有时”或“很少”给予口服营养补充剂。
低回复率可能意味着围手术期营养的循证益处未获得足够关注这一困境。即使在积极挑选“支持营养的受访者”的情况下,标准化术前营养不良筛查也很少见。围手术期较短禁食等方面已经得到更积极的实践。然而,在德国外科护理中推广基于指南的临床营养仍需付出更大努力。