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CLINICAL BENEFITS OF AN IMMUNE-ENHANCING DIET FOR EARLY POSTINJURY ENTERAL FEEDING
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1994
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InflammationNutritionFood IntoleranceImmunologyClinical NutritionGastroenterologySepsisMedical NutritionAutoimmunitySerum Total ProteinMedical Nutrition TherapyMedicineEarly Enteral NutritionMajor Torso TraumaExperimental NutritionDietary Therapy
In this multicenter prospective controlled trial, 98 evaluable patients sustaining major torso trauma were randomized to receive early enteral nutrition with a new "immune-enhancing" diet (study: n = 51) or a standard stress enteral formula (control: n = 47). At baseline, both groups had comparable demographics and Injury Severity Scores. After 7 days of feeding, the groups had equivalent increases in serum total protein, albumin, and transferrin concentrations. Patients receiving the "immune-enhancing" diet, however, experienced significantly greater increases in total lymphocyte (p = 0.014), T lymphocyte (p = 0.04), and T-helper (p = 0.004) cell numbers. Additionally, these patients had significantly fewer intraabdominal abscesses (study, 0% vs. control, 11%; p = 0.023) and significantly less multiple organ failure (study, 0% vs. control, 11%; p = 0.023). In conclusion, this multicenter trial suggests this "immune-enhancing" enteral diet offers clinical benefits in stressed surgical patients.