Strandjord Sarah E, Sieke Erin H, Richmond Miranda, Khadilkar Arjun, Rome Ellen S
Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine of Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland Clinic, Mail Code NA21, 9500 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, OH, 44195, USA.
Office of Civic Education Initiatives Internship Program, Cleveland Clinic, 25875 Science Park Drive/AC121, Beachwood, OH, 44122, USA.
Eat Weight Disord. 2016 Sep;21(3):403-410. doi: 10.1007/s40519-015-0245-5. Epub 2015 Nov 23.
Nutritional insufficiency (NI) is a potential consequence of restrictive eating disorders. NI patients often require hospitalization for refeeding to restore medical stability and prevent complications such as refeeding syndrome. Limited information is available on the optimal approach to refeeding. In this study, we describe an inpatient NI care path and compare treatment outcomes at an academic medical center and a community hospital.
A retrospective chart review was conducted on inpatients treated using a standardized NI care path at either the academic site, from August 2012 to July 2013 (n = 51), or the community site, from August 2013 to July 2014 (n = 39). Demographic information, eating disorder history, and treatment variables were recorded for each patient. Data were compared using the Kruskal-Wallis test and Fisher's exact test.
Patients admitted to the community site had shorter hospital stays than patients admitted to the academic site (IQR 2-4 vs. 2-7 days, p = 0.03). All patients were discharged in <14 days with a median stay of 3 days. The median initial calorie prescription was 2200 calories for both groups. No clinical cases of refeeding syndrome occurred, with only one patient developing hypophosphatemia during refeeding.
A standardized care path with a higher-calorie intervention allows for short-term hospitalization of NI patients without increasing the risk of refeeding syndrome, regardless of treatment site. This study demonstrates the efficiency and safety of treating NI patients on a regular medical floor at a community hospital.
营养不足(NI)是限制性饮食失调的一个潜在后果。NI患者通常需要住院进行重新喂养,以恢复身体状况稳定并预防诸如再喂养综合征等并发症。关于重新喂养的最佳方法,现有信息有限。在本研究中,我们描述了一种住院NI护理路径,并比较了在一所学术医疗中心和一家社区医院的治疗结果。
对2012年8月至2013年7月在学术机构(n = 51)或2013年8月至2014年7月在社区机构(n = 39)使用标准化NI护理路径治疗的住院患者进行回顾性病历审查。记录每位患者的人口统计学信息、饮食失调病史和治疗变量。使用Kruskal-Wallis检验和Fisher精确检验对数据进行比较。
入住社区机构的患者住院时间比入住学术机构的患者短(四分位距2 - 4天对2 - 7天,p = 0.03)。所有患者均在14天内出院,中位住院时间为3天。两组的初始热量处方中位数均为2200卡路里。未发生再喂养综合征的临床病例,仅1例患者在重新喂养期间出现低磷血症。
无论治疗地点如何,采用高热量干预的标准化护理路径可使NI患者短期住院,而不会增加再喂养综合征的风险。本研究证明了在社区医院普通内科病房治疗NI患者的有效性和安全性。