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Nutritional Outcomes Following Pediatric Intestinal Transplantation

Authors :
Marvin E. Ament
S. V. McDiarmid
Robert S. Venick
Laurie Reyen
Ronald W. Busuttil
Jorge Vargas
D. Saikali
J. Colangelo
Douglas G. Farmer
S. Gordon
Source :
Transplantation Proceedings. 38:1718-1719
Publication Year :
2006
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2006.

Abstract

Background This study sought to describe the long-term nutritional outcomes of children after intestinal transplant (SBT). Methods Between 1991 and March 2005, 30 children received 33 SBT at a single center. Eligibility criteria included patient and graft survival >6 months. Weight, height, albumin, prealbumin, zinc (Zn), and essential fatty acid (EFA) levels were reviewed retrospectively. Results The 19 patients who met inclusion criteria had a median age at SBT of 2.9 years. The majority of patients were male, Latino, transplanted for necrotizing enterocolitis and received combined liver-SBT. All patients were weaned off total parenteral nutrition to elemental formula at a mean of 39 days post-SBT. Seventeen of 19 patients were Zn deficient and four patients were EFA deficient post-SBT. Conclusions Pre-SBT most subjects were significantly deficient in anthropometric and biochemical parameters. Post-SBT the mean Z score for weight and height improved significantly at year 1, then leveled off in year 2. Serum protein levels improved from pre-SBT, yet remained low–normal. Zn deficiency was seen frequently after SBT and is under investigation. Children who developed EFA deficiency were on the same formula, receiving inadequate EFA supplementation. Successful SBT was associated with growth and maintenance of serum nutritional parameters but not with significant catch-up growth.

Details

ISSN :
00411345
Volume :
38
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Transplantation Proceedings
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7b83e4002a935dc7df818a250699dbf0
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.transproceed.2006.05.051