High protein enteral feedings: a means of achieving positive nitrogen balance in head injured patients.
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] F. Gerstenbrand,et al. Urinary catecholamine excretion and thyroid hormone blood level in the course of severe acute brain damage , 1975, European journal of intensive care medicine.
[2] R. Grossman,et al. The metabolic response to severe head injury. , 1984, Journal of neurosurgery.
[3] F. Cerra,et al. Nitrogen retention in critically ill patients is proportional to the branched chain amino acid load , 1983, Critical Care Medicine.
[4] R. Angelico,et al. Cirrhosis, encephalopathy, and improved results with metabolic support. , 1983, Surgery.
[5] B. Young,et al. The favorable effect of early parenteral feeding on survival in head-injured patients. , 1983, Journal of neurosurgery.
[6] R. Wolfe,et al. Response of Protein and Urea Kinetics in Burn Patients to Different Levels of Protein Intake , 1983, Annals of surgery.
[7] C. Long,et al. Effects of major skeletal trauma on whole body protein turnover in man measured by L-[1,14C]-leucine. , 1980, Surgery.
[8] F. Balzola,et al. Dietetic treatment with hypercaloric and hyperprotein intake in patients following severe brain injury. , 1980, Journal of neurosurgical sciences.
[9] P. Wright,et al. Comparison of proprietary elemental and whole-protein diets in unconscious patients with head injury. , 1980, British medical journal.
[10] W. Beisel,et al. Gluconeogenesis, ureagenesis, and ketogenesis during sepsis. , 1980, JPEN. Journal of parenteral and enteral nutrition.
[11] C. Bryan-Brown,et al. Postoperative nutritional failure and chronic cerebral edema in neurosurgical patients. , 1978, The Mount Sinai journal of medicine, New York.
[12] R. Revuelta,et al. Tube Feeding and Lethal Aspiration in Neurological Patients: A Review of 720 Autopsy Cases , 1974, Stroke.