24-25-dihydroxyvitamin-d-3 and Malnutrition

24-25-dihydroxyvitamin-d-3 has been researched along with Malnutrition* in 1 studies

Trials

1 trial(s) available for 24-25-dihydroxyvitamin-d-3 and Malnutrition

ArticleYear
Short-term individual nutritional care as part of routine clinical setting improves outcome and quality of life in malnourished medical patients.
    Clinical nutrition (Edinburgh, Scotland), 2011, Volume: 30, Issue:2

    Strategies to treat malnutrition lack practicability in the hospital setting. The present study aimed at developing and evaluating a routinely manageable concept for an improved nutritional care of malnourished in-hospital patients.. A randomized controlled intervention study was conducted. 132 risk patients defined by Nutritional Risk Screening 2002, were randomized to individualised nutrition support (intervention group [n = 66]) or standard hospital care (control group [n = 66]). Body weight, plasma vitamin levels, quality of life, complications, antibiotic therapies, readmissions and mortality were assessed.. Nutrition interventions led to higher intakes (mean [standard deviation]) in energy (1553 [341] kcal vs. 1115 [381] kcal, p < 0.001) and protein (65.4 [16.4] g vs. 43.9 [17.2] g, p < 0.001). Intervention patients (n = 66) kept their body weight in comparison to control patients (n = 66; 0.0 [2.9] kg vs. -1.4 [3.2] kg, p = 0.008). Positive effects on plasma ascorbic acid level (46.7 [26.7] μmol/l vs. 34.1 [24.2] μmol/l, p = 0.010), SF-36 function summary scale (37 [11] % vs. 32 [9] %, p = 0.030), number of complications (4/66 vs. 13/66, p = 0.035), antibiotic therapies (1/66 vs. 8/66, p = 0.033) and readmissions (17/64 vs. 28/61, p = 0.027) were recorded.. Malnourished patients profit from nutrition support regarding nutrition status and quality of life. They have fewer complications, need fewer antibiotics and are less often re-hospitalised.

    Topics: 24,25-Dihydroxyvitamin D 3; Adult; Aged; Aged, 80 and over; Analysis of Variance; Ascorbic Acid; Body Weight; Elder Nutritional Physiological Phenomena; Energy Intake; Female; Follow-Up Studies; Glutathione; Hospitalization; Humans; Male; Malnutrition; Mass Screening; Middle Aged; Nutritional Status; Quality of Life; Risk Factors; Surveys and Questionnaires; Treatment Outcome; Young Adult

2011