Improvement of nutritional status in cholestatic children with supplemental nocturnal enteral nutrition.

Protein energy malnutrition is a common complication in cholestatic children in a hepatic transplant program, and may be detrimental to the postoperative outcome. Improvement of the nutritional status may be of obvious importance to improve the prognosis. This study compared oral nutrition with oral nutrition supplemented with nocturnal enteral feeding in children with prolonged cholestasis. In six children with prolonged cholestasis (conjugated bilirubin over 25 mg/L and/or GGT over 110 IU/L in infants aged less than 3 months or over 50 IU/L in older infants and/or alkaline phosphatase over 500 IU/L, for more than 3 months), we compared a 4 to 6 month period with oral nutrition and similar periods with 10 to 12 h nocturnal enteral feeding given at home as an energetic supplement. Energy intake during the second period was 180-200% of recommended dietary allowances. No ascites was found in the six patients during the study period. The Z scores of body weight, weight expressed as percent of ideal body weight (IBW), weight/height2, and arm circumference/head circumference were calculated at the beginning and at the end of each period. With only oral nutrition, a diminution in percentage of ideal W/H and a diminution in Z score for the body weight were observed in five of six patients. At the end of the second period, the average of all of the nutritional indexes was increased and the Z score for the body weight was also increased in four of six patients. Significant statistical differences (p less than 0.05) were found in W as percentage of IBW and the Z score for log W/H2.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)