9 research outputs found

    Nutritional therapy and infectious diseases: a two-edged sword

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    The benefits and risks of nutritional therapies in the prevention and management of infectious diseases in the developed world are reviewed. There is strong evidence that early enteral feeding of patients prevents infections in a variety of traumatic and surgical illnesses. There is, however, little support for similar early feeding in medical illnesses. Parenteral nutrition increases the risk of infection when compared to enteral feeding or delayed nutrition. The use of gastric feedings appears to be as safe and effective as small bowel feedings. Dietary supplementation with glutamine appears to lower the risk of post-surgical infections and the ingestion of cranberry products has value in preventing urinary tract infections in women

    Nutrition support in clinical practice: review of published data and recommendations for future research directions

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    Apport nutritionnel et pratique clinique : revue des données publiées et recommandations pour les axes de recherche future

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    S3 Guideline Sepsis—prevention, diagnosis, therapy, and aftercare

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