Effect of dietary supplement on nutritional status and clinical outcome in 501 geriatric patients--a randomised study.

The present study was designed to evaluate to the effect of dietary supplements on clinical outcome and nutritional status in a large group of geriatric patients (n = 501). The patients were randomised into an experimental group which received nutritional supplementation (400 kcal) as well as a standard hospital diet, and a control group on hospital diet alone. The nutritional state was measured on admission and after 8 and 26 weeks by anthropometry, serum protein analysis and a delayed hypersensitivity skin test. Protein energy malnutrition was defined as the presence of three or more abnormal parameters. 28.5% of patients showed evidence of malnutrition on admission. Hospitalisation itself resulted in a gradual deterioration in nutritional status. Nutritional supplementation generally improved nutritional state. Among those patients who were well nourished on admission, and subsequently receiving dietary supplementation, 8.3% fulfilled malnutrition criteria after 26 weeks, while 21.1% were considered malnourished in the control group (p < 0.05). The improvement observed in transport proteins was probably related to nutritional support and not just to the reversal of inflammation. In the initially well nourished group of more than 300 patients, the mortality rate was 8.6% in those given nutritional support compared to 18.6% in the control group (p < 0.02).

[1]  J. H. Duke,et al.  Tissue Composition of Weight Loss in Surgical Patients I. Elective Operation , 1968, Annals of surgery.

[2]  T. Symreng Arm anthropometry in a large reference population and in surgical patients. , 1982, Clinical nutrition.

[3]  B. Kågedal,et al.  Nutritional assessment and clinical course in 112 elective surgical patients. , 1983, Acta chirurgica Scandinavica.

[4]  G. Hill,et al.  Improved wound healing response in surgical patients receiving intravenous nutrition , 1987, The British journal of surgery.

[5]  B. Steen,et al.  Hospital nutrition in geriatric long-term care medicine: II. Effects of dietary supplements. , 1987, Age and ageing.

[6]  J. Larsson,et al.  The effect of starvation on skeletal muscle function in man. , 1986, Clinical nutrition.

[7]  K. Lundholm,et al.  Clinical Significance of Preoperative Nutritional Status in 215 Noncancer Patients , 1984, Annals of surgery.

[8]  R. Chandra NUTRITION, IMMUNITY, AND INFECTION: PRESENT KNOWLEDGE AND FUTURE DIRECTIONS , 1983, The Lancet.

[9]  K. Asplund,et al.  Nutritional assessment of psychogeriatric patients. , 1981, Age and ageing.

[10]  I. Hessov Energy and protein intake in elderly patients in an orthopedic surgical ward. , 1977, Acta chirurgica Scandinavica.

[11]  C. Price,et al.  Immunonephelometric and immunoturbidimetric assays for proteins. , 1983, Critical reviews in clinical laboratory sciences.

[12]  A. J. Rich,et al.  The assessment of body composition in clinical conditions , 1982, Proceedings of the Nutrition Society.

[13]  J. Larsson,et al.  Changes in nutritional assessment variables caused by total parenteral nutrition in anorexia nervosa. , 1985, Clinical nutrition.

[14]  W. Steffee Malnutrition in hospitalized patients. , 1980, JAMA.

[15]  S. Allison,et al.  Benefits of supplementary tube feeding after fractured neck of femur: a randomised controlled trial. , 1983, British medical journal.