Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03017079

A More Physiological Feeding Process in ICU:the Intermittent Infusion With Semi-solidification of Nutrients

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
40 (actual)
Sponsor
Second Affiliated Hospital, School of Medicine, Zhejiang University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
14 Years – 90 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Malnutrition and underfeeding are major challenges in caring for critically ill patients. Continuous feeding were thought to be better tolerated by patients with the limited absorptive gut surface area or gastrointestinal dysfunction, but associated with more tube clogging and required the patient to be attached to an infusion pump for significant periods of time. Intermittent infusion resembled more physiological feeding process, which allowed greater patient mobility and might reach goal enteral calories earlier, and the latter were considered to effectively decrease the length of stay (LOS)-in-hospital and mortality. However, it also had some previous study found that intermittent infusion had more complications, such as diarrhea, regurgitation than continuous. Some study found that it was an efficient way to prevent aspiration and reflux by increasing the enteral nutrient solution viscosity and improve bolus intermittent feeding intolerance. The primary goal of this was to study whether receiving semi-solidification of nutrients could increase the percent prescribed calories received by improving the feeding intolerance, and secondary goal was to observing the effect of semi-solid nutrient to the LOS of ICU and in-hospital, lung infection, 30-days mortality and the glycemic variability (GV).

Detailed description

Enteral nutrition (EN) therapy is an essential part in critically ill patients,and can be administered on a continuous or intermittent, but there were no consensus on which should be adopted. Continuous feeding were thought to be better tolerated by patients with the limited absorptive gut surface area or gastrointestinal dysfunction, but associated with more tube clogging and required the patient to be attached to an infusion pump for significant periods of time. Intermittent infusion resembled more physiological feeding process, which allowed greater patient mobility and might reach goal enteral calories earlier, and the latter were considered to effectively decrease the LOS-in-hospital and mortality. However, it also had some previous study found that intermittent infusion had more complications, such as diarrhea, regurgitation than continuous. Recently, some study found that it was an efficient way to prevent aspiration and reflux by increasing the enteral nutrient solution viscosity and improve bolus intermittent feeding intolerance. In dementia or Parkinson's patients, one study showed that high-viscosity liquid meal could decrease the incidence of aspiration, compared with the thin liquid, but the study about the viscosity of nutrition was little and the sample size was small. In this study, the primary goal of this was to study whether receiving semi-solidification of nutrients could increase the percent prescribed calories received by improving the feeding intolerance, and secondary goal was to observing the effect of semi-solid nutrient to the LOS of ICU and in-hospital, lung infection, 30-days mortality and the glycemic variability (GV).

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DIETARY_SUPPLEMENTsemi-solid agent with standard enteral feedingafter infusion of semi-solid agent, Intermittent enteral feeding is applied less than 60 minutes
OTHERstandard enteral feedingIntermittent enteral feeding is applied less than 60 minutes

Timeline

Start date
2016-06-01
Primary completion
2017-03-01
Completion
2017-03-01
First posted
2017-01-11
Last updated
2021-11-02
Results posted
2021-11-02

Locations

1 site across 1 country: China

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03017079. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.