• Annals of surgery · Jan 2013

    Clinical Trial

    The anabolic effect of perioperative nutrition depends on the patient's catabolic state before surgery.

    • Thomas Schricker, Linda Wykes, Sarkis Meterissian, Roupen Hatzakorzian, Leopold Eberhart, George Carvalho, Ari Meguerditchian, Evan Nitschmann, and Ralph Lattermann.
    • Department of Anaesthesia, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada. thomas.schricker@mcgill.ca
    • Ann. Surg.. 2013 Jan 1;257(1):155-9.

    ObjectiveWe tested the hypothesis that the anabolic effect of hypocaloric, isonitrogenous nutrition in patients undergoing colorectal surgery depends on the patient's preoperative catabolic state.BackgroundAlthough there is evidence to suggest that total parenteral nutrition more effectively spares protein in depleted than in nondepleted cancer patients, the influence of preoperative catabolism on the anabolic effects of hypocaloric nutrition in patients undergoing elective surgery is unknown.MethodsSeventeen patients undergoing colorectal surgery received intravenous infusion of glucose with amino acids. Feeding was administered over 72 hours, from 24 hours before until 48 hours after surgery. Glucose provided 50% of the patient's measured resting energy expenditure. Amino acids provided 20% of the resting energy expenditure. Whole-body leucine balance (difference between the incorporation of leucine into protein = protein synthesis and endogenous leucine release = proteolysis) was determined using L-[1-(13)C]leucine kinetics before and 2 days after surgery. We analyzed the association between the postoperative increase in leucine balance and the following factors: preoperative leucine balance, protein breakdown, weight loss, oxygen consumption, circulating concentrations of glucose, free fatty acids, insulin, glucagon, cortisol, albumin, age, duration of surgery, and blood loss.ResultsOf 6 potentially relevant variables, 4 (weight loss, protein breakdown, albumin, and cortisol) were removed because they were not significant during the stepwise linear regression procedure. Leucine balance and age were the remaining 2 factors that remained with the final regression model: Δleucine balance = 19.1 - (0.20 × age [years]) - (0.58) × leucine balance(preOP)).ConclusionsWe demonstrate a significant association between the degree of preoperative catabolism, the patient's age, and the anabolic effect of hypocaloric nutrition (ClinicalTrials.gov registration ID: NCT01414946).

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