Piciucchi M, Merola E, Marignani M, Signoretti M, Valente R, Cocomello L, Baccini F, Panzuto F, Capurso G, Fave GD. Nasogastric or nasointestinal feeding in severe acute pancreatitis. World J Gastroenterol 2010; 16(29): 3692-3696 [PMID: 20677342 DOI: 10.3748/wjg.v16.i29.3692]
Corresponding Author of This Article
Gianfranco Delle Fave, Professor, Digestive and Liver Disease Unit, II Medical School, University “Sapienza”, S. Andrea Hospital, Via Di Grottarossa 1035, 00189 Rome, Italy. gianfranco.dellefave@uniroma1.it
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Brief Article
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World J Gastroenterol. Aug 7, 2010; 16(29): 3692-3696 Published online Aug 7, 2010. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v16.i29.3692
Table 1 Characteristics of the 116 patients with acute pancreatitis hospitalized in the study period n (%)
Gender (female/male)
53/63
Median age (range, yr)
55.5 (17-92)
Mild/severe pancreatitis
88/28
Etiology
Biliary
59 (50.9)
Alcoholic
28 (24.1)
Drug-induced
4 (3.4)
Idiopathic
8 (6.9)
Hypertrigliceridemia
3 (2.6)
Iatrogenic
6 (5.2)
Autoimmune
1 (0.9)
Traumatic
1 (0.9)
Pancreas divisum
4 (3.4)
Intrapapillary mucinous tumour
2 (1.7)
Table 2 Demographics and clinical features of the 25 patients with predicted severe acute pancreatitis who received enteral nutrition, according to tube position at nutrition start
Nasogastric (n = 15)
Nasointestinal (n = 10)
P
Sex (female, %)
6 (40)
4 (40)
1
Median age (yr)
56 (31-83)
63 (36-89)
0.3
BMI (kg/m2)
24.8 (21.4-28.2)
25.4 (21.8-29.1)
0.7
Amylase at entry (U/L; nv < 110)
1045.5 (592.2-1498.8)
1141.6 (127.7-2155.4)
0.8
Lipase at entry (U/L; nv < 300)
8559.8 (3676.4-13 443.2)
14 037 (2026.1-30 100.1)
0.4
CT severity index
6.2 (5.1-7.2)
4.7 (3.5-5.8)
0.04
Ranson’s score
3.8 (3.1-4.6)
3 (1.6-4.3)
0.2
CRP at 72 h (mg/L)
149.1 (82.5-215.6)
138 (27-249)
0.8
White blood dells count at entry
13 620 (10 476-16 760)
9940 (5200-14 675)
0.1
LDH at entry (mU/mL)
841.8 (608.8-1074.7)
862.6 (244.8-1480.4)
0.9
Hematocrit at entry (%)
38.6 (33.9-43.2)
39.6 (35.9-43.2)
0.7
Etiology: biliary/alcoholic or other
6/9
5/5
0.6
Table 3 Tolerability and success of nutrition according to tube position n (%)
Nasogastric (n = 15)
Nasointestinal (n = 10)
P
Tube malpositioning
0
0
-
Epistaxis or Sinusitis
1 (6.6)
1 (10)
1
Accidental tube removal
0
1 (10)
0.4
Tube clogging
1 (6.6)
0
1
Aspiration pneumonia
0
0
-
Exacerbation of pain
5 (33.3)
2 (20)
0.68
Vomiting
2 (13.3)
1 (10)
1
Diarrhoea
5 (33.3)
3 (30)
1
Amylase increase > 10%
0
0
-
Lipase increase > 10%
1 (6.6)
0
1
CRP increase > 10%
2 (13.3)
2 (20)
1
Need to switch to TPN
4 (26.6)
0
0.27
Energetic target reached
14 (93.3)
8 (80)
1
Days to caloric target, mean (95% CI)
5.6 (3.8-7.4)
4.3 (3.1-5.6)
0.3
Table 4 Clinical outcomes of patients according to tube position n (%)
Nasogastric (n = 15)
Nasointestinal (n = 10)
P
Mortality
0
0
-
Need of surgery
0
0
-
Complications
Infected pancreatic necrosis
3 (20)
1 (10)
1
Renal failure
1 (6.6)
0
1
Respiratory failure
2 (13.3)
0
0.1
Bleeding
1 (6.6)
0
1
Any of the above complications
4 (26.6)
1 (10)
0.6
Total hospital stay,mean (95% CI)
30.6 (18.1-43)
21.2 (17.7-24.6)
0.1
Citation: Piciucchi M, Merola E, Marignani M, Signoretti M, Valente R, Cocomello L, Baccini F, Panzuto F, Capurso G, Fave GD. Nasogastric or nasointestinal feeding in severe acute pancreatitis. World J Gastroenterol 2010; 16(29): 3692-3696