Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
Continuous enteral nutrition is used to feed patients in intensive care who are unable to eat normally. The goal of this observational study is to learn about the uptake of nutrients from feeding formula. The study method will first be applied in healthy persons to establish workability and normal values, then in patients in the intensive care unit to learn how nutrient uptake is affected by critical illness.
The main questions this study aims to answer are:
Participants receive feeding formula through a nasogastric feeding tube and blood samples are taken at short intervals to analyse uptake of nutrients into blood. Simultaneously, the filling volume of the stomach is measured by gastric ultrasound.
Full description
Background
The investigators have previously studied the uptake of dietary isotope-labeled phenylalanine and plasma amino acid concentrations in critically ill patients and healthy subjects. During continuous feeding, uptake was unexpectedly found to be highly variable over time. Due to infrequent sampling, the time course of variability could not be modeled mathematically. Also, the underlying physiological mechanisms remain unclear, though it is hypothesized that gastric emptying is a major factor determining temporal variability.
The study here described is a follow-up that includes serial abdominal ultrasound studies to measure gastric emptying, additional indicators/tracers to determine more detail of uptake vs. digestion/transport/metabolism, and makes use of more frequent sampling to allow for detailed mathematical modeling of temporal variability.
Experimental protocol
ICU patients:
Healthy subjects
Nutrition, sampling, measurements
Experimental nutrition
Analyses
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Inclusion Criteria (ICU patients):
Exclusion Criteria (ICU patients):
Inclusion Criteria (healthy subjects):
Exclusion Criteria (healthy subjects)
20 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Central trial contact
Olav Rooyackers, Prof Phd; Felix Liebau, MD PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal