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Relationship of somatomedin-C/insulin-like growth factor I levels to conventional nutritional indices in critically ill patients
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1987
Year
NutritionIll PatientsPlasma AlbuminObesityMetabolic SyndromeSomatomedin-c/insulin-like Growth FactorBody CompositionTwenty Icu PatientsSepsisClinical ChemistryChronic Kidney DiseaseConventional Nutritional IndicesPlasma PrealbuminHealth SciencesGrowth HormoneInsulin ManagementClinical NutritionDiabetesMedicine
Twenty ICU patients, with varying diagnoses and degrees of catabolism, were studied prospectively to determine whether somatomedin-C/insulin-like growth factor I (SMC/IGFI) is related to the conventional nutritional indices, plasma prealbumin, transferrin and albumin, and nitrogen balance (NB) in critical illness. Mean SMC/IGFI concentration in these critically ill patients was below the lower limit of the reference range. SMC/IGFI concentrations correlated with NB for the 24 h before measurement (r = .38, p less than .01) and with cumulative NB for the previous 2 (r = .50, p less than .01), 3 (r = .34, p less than .05), and 5 days (r = .46, p less than .05). Prealbumin correlated with cumulative 5-day NB (r = .39, p less than .05). Plasma albumin and transferrin concentrations did not correlate with NB for any of these time periods. SMC/IGFI concentrations correlated with cumulative protein (r = .59, p less than .01), carbohydrate (r = .63, p less than .01), and energy intake (r = .64, p less than .01). SMC/IGFI was the only index which consistently correlated with NB. We conclude it is a useful index of nutritional status in critically ill patients.