Surgical patients fed up until the point of surgery will have safe delivery of more calories compared to a group whose feeding is held at midnight prior to surgery.
Nutrition is essential for healing and recovery from illness. Tube feeds are the standard care for patients with prolonged stays in the intensive care unit (ICU) who cannot eat food on their own. Tube feeding means that a tube has been placed in a patient's stomach or small intestine to provide nutrition. When a patient is scheduled for an elective surgery, he/she usually has nothing to eat after midnight prior to the operation. A fasting period before surgery is done to avoid possible side effects during the placement of a breathing tube. Having an empty stomach is thought to decrease the chances of vomiting or aspiration while a breathing tube is placed. (Aspiration occurs when a substance, such as food provided by a tube feed, enters the airway.) However, some patients already have a breathing tube in place. The investigators do not know which is better for patients who already have a breathing tube in place: continuing feedings up until surgery or stopping them the night before. The investigators hypothesize intubated surgical patients randomized to a protocol of feeding up until the point of surgery will have the safe delivery of more calories as compared to a group whose feeding is held at midnight prior to surgery.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
36
Tube feeds continued up until elective surgery.
Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU)
Portland, Oregon, United States
Total calories delivered
The total number of calories subject consume while receiving tube feeding.
Time frame: Daily for length of stay (LOS). LOS defined as time from admission to discharge. LOS estimated to average three (3) weeks per participant.
Laboratory values
Laboratory values of interest include: CBC, liver function tests, basic metabolic panel, magnesium, phosphate, alubmin, prealubumin, c-reactive protein, and arterial blood gas.
Time frame: Daily for length of stay (LOS). LOS defined as time from admission to discharge. LOS estimated to average three (3) weeks per participant.
Weight change
The change of weight during hospital admission.
Time frame: Daily for length of stay (LOS). LOS defined as time from admission to discharge. LOS estimated to average three (3) weeks per participant.
number of infections and aspiration events
Number of infections or aspiration events during hospitalization
Time frame: From date of randomization until the date of documented complication. Subjects will be followed until discharge in case of multiple complications. Date of discharge is estimated to be three (3) weeks post-admission on average.
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