Martinez Enid E, Bechard Lori J, Smallwood Craig D, Duggan Christopher P, Graham Robert J, Mehta Nilesh M
1Division of Critical Care Medicine, Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine, Boston Children's Hospital, Boston, MA. 2Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA. 3Division of Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition, Boston Children's Hospital, Boston, MA.
Pediatr Crit Care Med. 2015 Jul;16(6):e157-64. doi: 10.1097/PCC.0000000000000428.
Diet modification may improve body composition and respiratory variables in children with respiratory insufficiency. Our objective was to examine the effect of an individualized diet intervention on changes in weight, lean body mass, minute ventilation, and volumetric CO2 production in children dependent on long-term mechanical ventilatory support.
Prospective, open-labeled interventional study.
Study subjects' homes.
Children, 1 month to 17 years old, dependent on at least 12 hr/d of transtracheal mechanical ventilatory support.
Twelve weeks of an individualized diet modified to deliver energy at 90-110% of measured energy expenditure and protein intake per age-based guidelines.
During a multidisciplinary home visit, we obtained baseline values of height and weight, lean body mass percent by bioelectrical impedance analysis, actual energy and protein intake by food record, and measured energy expenditure by indirect calorimetry. An individualized diet was then prescribed to optimize energy and protein intake. After 12 weeks on this interventional diet, we evaluated changes in weight, height, lean body mass percent, minute ventilation, and volumetric CO2 production. Sixteen subjects, mean age 9.3 years (SD, 4.9), eight male, completed the study. For the diet intervention, a majority of subjects required a change in energy and protein prescription. The mean percentage of energy delivered as carbohydrate was significantly decreased, 51.7% at baseline versus 48.2% at follow-up, p = 0.009. Mean height and weight increased on the modified diet. Mean lean body mass percent increased from 58.3% to 61.8%. Minute ventilation was significantly lower (0.18 L/min/kg vs 0.15 L/min/kg; p = 0.04), and we observed a trend toward lower volumetric CO2 production (5.4 mL/min/kg vs 5.3 mL/min/kg; p = 0.06) after 12 weeks on the interventional diet.
Individualized diet modification is feasible and associated with a significant decrease in minute ventilation, a trend toward significant reduction in CO2 production, and improved body composition in children on long-term mechanical ventilation. Optimization of respiratory variables and lean body mass by diet modification may benefit children with respiratory insufficiency in the ICU.
饮食调整可能改善呼吸功能不全儿童的身体组成和呼吸变量。我们的目的是研究个体化饮食干预对长期依赖机械通气支持的儿童体重、去脂体重、分钟通气量和二氧化碳生成量变化的影响。
前瞻性、开放标签干预研究。
研究对象家中。
年龄1个月至17岁、每天至少依赖经气管机械通气支持12小时的儿童。
进行为期12周的个体化饮食调整,根据年龄相关指南,提供的能量为测量的能量消耗的90%至110%,并摄入蛋白质。
在多学科家访期间,我们通过生物电阻抗分析获得身高和体重的基线值、去脂体重百分比,通过食物记录获得实际能量和蛋白质摄入量,并通过间接测热法测量能量消耗。然后制定个体化饮食方案以优化能量和蛋白质摄入。在接受这种干预性饮食12周后,我们评估了体重、身高、去脂体重百分比、分钟通气量和二氧化碳生成量的变化。16名受试者完成了研究,平均年龄9.3岁(标准差4.9),8名男性。对于饮食干预,大多数受试者需要改变能量和蛋白质处方。作为碳水化合物提供的能量的平均百分比显著降低,基线时为51.7%,随访时为48.2%,p = 0.009。改良饮食后平均身高和体重增加。去脂体重百分比的平均值从58.3%增加到61.8%。干预性饮食12周后,分钟通气量显著降低(0.18升/分钟/千克对0.15升/分钟/千克;p = 0.04),并且我们观察到二氧化碳生成量有降低趋势(5.4毫升/分钟/千克对5.3毫升/分钟/千克;p = 0.06)。
个体化饮食调整是可行的,并且与长期机械通气儿童的分钟通气量显著降低、二氧化碳生成量显著减少趋势以及身体组成改善相关。通过饮食调整优化呼吸变量和去脂体重可能使重症监护病房中呼吸功能不全的儿童受益。