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Case Report

Nutrition Management Through Nitrogen Balance Analysis in Patient With Short Bowel Syndrome

Clinical Nutrition Research 2022;11(2):146-152.
Published online: April 26, 2022

1Department of Nutrition Services, Eunpyeong St. Mary’s Hospital, College of Medicine, The Catholic University of Korea, Seoul 03312, Korea.

2Department of Surgery, Eunpyeong St. Mary’s Hospital, College of Medicine, The Catholic University of Korea, Seoul 03312, Korea.

3Department of Laboratory Medicine, Eunpyeong St. Mary’s Hospital, College of Medicine, The Catholic University of Korea, Seoul 03312, Korea.

4Department of Pharmacy, Eunpyeong St. Mary’s Hospital, College of Medicine, The Catholic University of Korea, Seoul 03312, Korea.

Correspondence to Aram Kim. Department of Nutrition Services, Eunpyeong St. Mary’s Hospital, College of Medicine, The Catholic University of Korea, 1021 Tongil-ro, Eunpyeong-gu, Seoul 03312, Korea. nutrar12@cmcnu.or.kr
• Received: March 10, 2022   • Revised: April 4, 2022   • Accepted: April 4, 2022

Copyright © 2022. The Korean Society of Clinical Nutrition

This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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Citations

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  • A Case Report of a Patient with Suicidal Trauma, Abdominal Surgery, and Short Bowel Syndrome
    Ghasem Zarei, Iman Nariman, Hosein Ghaderi-Zefrhi, Mohamad Sadegh Aboutalebi
    Journal of Surgery and Trauma.2024; 12(4): 160.     CrossRef

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Nutrition Management Through Nitrogen Balance Analysis in Patient With Short Bowel Syndrome
Clin Nutr Res. 2022;11(2):146-152.   Published online April 26, 2022
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Nutrition Management Through Nitrogen Balance Analysis in Patient With Short Bowel Syndrome
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Figure 1 The energy (kcal/day) and protein (g/day) intakes from diet and PN.PN, parenteral nutrition; HD, hospital day.
Figure 2 Nitrogen balance under diet and parenteral nutrition (PN).PN, parenteral nutrition; N, nitrogen; JO, jejunostomy output.*N balance = N intake-N Output [{Urine Urea N (mg/100 mL) × 24 Hours Urine Volume (L/day)} + 20% of Urinary Urea Loss + N of JO].†Calculated from JO data of Dual phase.
Nutrition Management Through Nitrogen Balance Analysis in Patient With Short Bowel Syndrome
[Initial nutritional assessment] Protein: 19 g/day (21%)Severe malnutrition (based on ASPEN/AND malnutrition criteria) [Nutrition requirement] Energy goal: 2,100 kcal/day (IBW × 35 kcal/kg)Protein requirement: 90 g/day (IBW × 1.5 g/kg)• 6 L/day of JO continues before admission• Dehydration status at the time of admission (Na-K-Cl 134-4.3-99.0, BUN/Cr 24.9/0.77) → Commercial ORS recommend starting with 1 L/day and increasing to 2–3 L/dayHD #15Calories: 101 kcal/dayCalories: 1,011 kcal/day (53%) [Diet order] Protein: 1.4 g/dayProtein: 47 g/day (52%): LD 500 g/day (HD #15)C:P:F = 94:06:00• Rice water (6 times/day)• ORS 500 mL + Free water 500 mL → ORS 1 L/day, due to JO continues more than 3 L (HD #17)HD #29Calories: 807 kcal/dayCalories: 1,614 kcal/day (115%) [Diet order] Protein: 34 g/dayProtein: 75 g/day (121%): SD 500 g/dayC:P:F = 35:17:48• Porridge (6 times/day) (HD #18) (High fat, low fiber, low water content diet)• Add protein powder• Fat sources: butter, mayonnaise (poor compliance to sesame oil and perilla oil)• Changed back to ORS 500 mL + Free water 500 mL (HD #24) (poor compliance of ORS)HD #36Calories: 603 kcal/dayCalories: 1,617 kcal/day (106%) [Diet order] Protein: 36 g/dayProtein: 91.9 g/day (142%): SD 550 g/dayC:P:F = 42:19:39• There is no change in JO volume and good dietary compliance, SD recommend to increase 600 g/day.HD #39Calories: 1,252 kcal/dayCalories: 1,653 kcal/day (138%) [Diet order] Protein: 49 g/dayProtein: 93.6 g/day (158%): SD 600 g/dayC:P:F = 43:16:41• There is no change in JO volume and good dietary compliance, SD recommend to increase 650 g/day.HD #43Calories: 898 kcal/dayCalories: 1,396 kcal/day (109%) [Diet order] Protein: 37 g/dayProtein: 81.6 g/day (132%): SD 650 g/dayC:P:F = 47:17:37• There is no change in JO volume and good dietary compliance, SD recommend to increase 700 g/day.HD #46Calories: 1,271 kcal/day (60%)- [Diet order] Protein: 102 g/day (113%): SD 700 g/dayC:P:F = 26:32:42• After increasing to SD 700 g/day, JO increasesHD #50Calories: 723 kcal/dayCalories: 872 kcal/day (76%) [Diet order] Protein: 40 g/dayProtein: 40.8 g/day (90%): SD 500 g/dayC:P:F = 46:22:32• 4/11 pitting edema observed• SD 500 g/day reduction and fat ratio adjustment (40% → 30%) with JO increase and r/o steatosisHD #53Calories: 677 kcal/dayCalories: 1,718 kcal/day (114%) [Diet order] Protein: 40 g/dayProtein: 90 g/day (144%): SD 500 g/dayC:P:F = 48:24:28• Changing the PN formulation to reduce fat supplied to IV → 3-in-1 PN supplied daily was reduced to twice a week, and 2-in-1 PN was supplied 5 times a week (HD #53)HD #71Calories: 755 kcal/dayCalories: 1,667 kcal/day (115%) [Nutritional assessment] Protein: 31 g/dayProtein: 70 g/day (112%)Severe malnutrition (based on ASPEN/AND malnutrition criteria)C:P:F = 48:17:35 [Diet order] : SD 500 g/day
Table 1 Progression of physical and biochemical findings of the patient

HD, hospital day; I/O, intake and output; JO, jejunostomy output; AST, aspartate transaminase; ALT, alanine transaminase; WBC, white blood cell; ANC, absolute neutrophil count.

Table 2 Summary of the nutrition care in short bowel syndrome patient

PN, parenteral nutrition; NPO, nothing by mouth; ASPEN/AND, American Society for Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition/Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics; IBW, ideal bodyweight; JO, jejunostomy output; HD, hospital day; C:P:F, charbohydrate:protein:fat ratio; ORS, oral rehydration solutions; LD, liquid diet; SD, soft diet; r/o, rule out; IV, intravenous.