作者
Merve Mısırlıoğlu,Dinçer Yıldızdaş,Faruk Ekıncı,Nihal Akçay,İlyas Bingöl,Ebru Şahin,Fatih Varol,Muhterem Duyu,Ayşe Aşık,Fatih Durak,Leyla Atman,Süleyman Bayraktar,Mehmet Alakaya,Ali Ertuğ Arslanköylü,Gürkan Bozan,Eylem Kıral,Özden Özgür Horoz,Hasan Ali Telefon,Abdullah Akkuş,Abdullah Yazar,Özlem Saraç Sandal,Hasan Ağın,Alper Köker,Nazan Ülgen Tekerek,Nurettin Onur Kutlu,Mehmet Kılınç,Ali Korulmaz,Hatice Feray Arı,Mutlu Uysal Yazıcı,Esra Şevketoğlu,Mehmet Emin Menentoğlu,Ebru Kaçmaz,Mehmet Nur Talay,Özhan Orhan,Berna Egehan Oruncu,Selman Kesici,Çağlar Ödek,Didar Arslan,Pınar Hepduman,Gültaç Evren,Hatice Kaya,Nazik Yener,Emrah Gün,Ilkem Gardiyanoglu,Muhammed Üdürgücü,Sinan Yavuz,A Avci,Murat Özkale,Yasemin Özkale,Damla Pinar Yavas Kocaoglu,Şahin Sincar,Yasemin Çoban
摘要
Background: The inability to ensure adequate nutrition for patients, and failure to provide adequate calorie and protein intake, result in malnutrition, leading to increased morbidity and mortality. The present study assesses the two approaches to enteral nutrition—intermittent and continuous enteral feeding—in critically ill pediatric patients in Türkiye to determine the superiority of one method over the other. Methods: Included in this multicenter prospective study were patients receiving enteral nutrition via a tube who were followed up over a 3-month period. Anthropometric data, calorie and protein intake, and signs of feeding intolerance were evaluated in a comparison of the different feeding methods. Results: A total of 510 patients were examined. In the continuous enteral feeding (CEF) group, 20.2% of patients developed metabolic abnormalities, and 49.5% experienced enteral nutrition intolerance, both of which were higher than in the intermittent enteral feeding (IEF) group, and the differences were statistically significant. No significant differences were observed between the two feeding methods in terms of reaching the target calorie intake on days 2 and 7 (p > 0.05). On day 7, there were significant differences between the two feeding methods in terms of calorie and protein intake (p = 0.023 and 0.014, respectively). Conclusions: In the present study, assessing the IEF and CEF approaches to enteral nutrition, critically ill pediatric patients receiving intermittent feeding exhibited lower rates of enteral nutrition intolerance and metabolic abnormalities. Furthermore, the calorie and protein intake on day 7 were noted to be higher in the IEF group than in the CEF group. Further randomized controlled trials are needed to confirm the findings of the present study.