4.7 Article

ESPEN practical guideline: Clinical nutrition in surgery

Journal

CLINICAL NUTRITION
Volume 40, Issue 7, Pages 4745-4761

Publisher

CHURCHILL LIVINGSTONE
DOI: 10.1016/j.clnu.2021.03.031

Keywords

Surgery; Perioperative nutrition; Nutritional therapy; Bariatric surgery; Organ transplantation; ERAS; Prehabilitation

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Early oral feeding is essential for surgical patients to prevent underfeeding and reduce the risk of postoperative complications. Nutritional management, including avoiding prolonged fasting, early initiation of oral feeding, and immediate nutritional therapy for at-risk patients, is crucial for successful perioperative care.
Early oral feeding is the preferred mode of nutrition for surgical patients. Avoidance of any nutritional therapy bears the risk of underfeeding during the postoperative course after major surgery. Considering that malnutrition and underfeeding are risk factors for postoperative complications, early enteral feeding is especially relevant for any surgical patient at nutritional risk, especially for those undergoing upper gastrointestinal surgery. The focus of this guideline is to cover both nutritional aspects of the Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) concept and the special nutritional needs of patients undergoing major surgery, e.g. for cancer, and of those developing severe complications despite best perioperative care. From a metabolic and nutritional point of view, the key aspects of perioperative care include the inte-gration of nutrition into the overall management of the patient, avoidance of long periods of preoperative fasting, re-establishment of oral feeding as early as possible after surgery, the start of nutritional therapy immediately if a nutritional risk becomes apparent, metabolic control e.g. of blood glucose, reduction of factors which exacerbate stress-related catabolism or impaired gastrointestinal function, minimized time on paralytic agents for ventilator management in the postoperative period, and early mobilization to facilitate protein synthesis and muscle function. (c) 2021 European Society for Clinical Nutrition and Metabolism. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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