Amino acid dosing in parenteral nutrition for very low birth weight preterm neonates: An outcome assessment

This study aimed to investigate the effects of parenteral nutrition (PN) administration of amino acids (AA) on physical changes among very low birth weight infants in a local hospital setting in Malaysia. A retrospective study was carried out at a hospital in Malaysia. Records of neonates prescribed...

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Published in:Asia Pacific Journal of Clinical Nutrition
Main Author: Kamarudin N.A.; Manan M.M.; Zulkifly H.H.; Neoh C.F.; Ali S.M.; Ming L.C.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: HEC Press 2016
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84966600886&doi=10.6133%2fapjcn.2016.25.2.02&partnerID=40&md5=4aede674d075cd71440e1168b12a57f7
id 2-s2.0-84966600886
spelling 2-s2.0-84966600886
Kamarudin N.A.; Manan M.M.; Zulkifly H.H.; Neoh C.F.; Ali S.M.; Ming L.C.
Amino acid dosing in parenteral nutrition for very low birth weight preterm neonates: An outcome assessment
2016
Asia Pacific Journal of Clinical Nutrition
25
1
10.6133/apjcn.2016.25.2.02
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84966600886&doi=10.6133%2fapjcn.2016.25.2.02&partnerID=40&md5=4aede674d075cd71440e1168b12a57f7
This study aimed to investigate the effects of parenteral nutrition (PN) administration of amino acids (AA) on physical changes among very low birth weight infants in a local hospital setting in Malaysia. A retrospective study was carried out at a hospital in Malaysia. Records of neonates prescribed PN in the neonatal unit in 2012 were screened for eligibility. A total of 199 premature neonates received PN support in the year 2012 and, of these, 100 fulfilled the inclusion criteria. The median value of AA intake on the first day of PN was 2.00 (< 28 weeks group); 1.00 (28-31 weeks group) and 0.75 (>31 weeks group). Neonates in the < 28 weeks group were more likely to receive AA at an earlier time and higher initial dose compared with the other age groups. The study also found that there was no statistically significant difference in the dose of AA on the first day of PN administration and that the significant variations in nutritional parameters among the subjects did not lead to differences in physical outcomes. This study identified that when PN is provided in the local hospital setting, it is likely that the current nutritional practices are inadequate to achieve the standard growth recommendations. Our findings call for a need to optimize AA and calorie intake since growth restriction is a morbidity which will affect the infants' growth and development. Current prescriptions for PN in this hospital need to be reviewed in order to improve patient outcomes.
HEC Press
09647058
English
Article

author Kamarudin N.A.; Manan M.M.; Zulkifly H.H.; Neoh C.F.; Ali S.M.; Ming L.C.
spellingShingle Kamarudin N.A.; Manan M.M.; Zulkifly H.H.; Neoh C.F.; Ali S.M.; Ming L.C.
Amino acid dosing in parenteral nutrition for very low birth weight preterm neonates: An outcome assessment
author_facet Kamarudin N.A.; Manan M.M.; Zulkifly H.H.; Neoh C.F.; Ali S.M.; Ming L.C.
author_sort Kamarudin N.A.; Manan M.M.; Zulkifly H.H.; Neoh C.F.; Ali S.M.; Ming L.C.
title Amino acid dosing in parenteral nutrition for very low birth weight preterm neonates: An outcome assessment
title_short Amino acid dosing in parenteral nutrition for very low birth weight preterm neonates: An outcome assessment
title_full Amino acid dosing in parenteral nutrition for very low birth weight preterm neonates: An outcome assessment
title_fullStr Amino acid dosing in parenteral nutrition for very low birth weight preterm neonates: An outcome assessment
title_full_unstemmed Amino acid dosing in parenteral nutrition for very low birth weight preterm neonates: An outcome assessment
title_sort Amino acid dosing in parenteral nutrition for very low birth weight preterm neonates: An outcome assessment
publishDate 2016
container_title Asia Pacific Journal of Clinical Nutrition
container_volume 25
container_issue 1
doi_str_mv 10.6133/apjcn.2016.25.2.02
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84966600886&doi=10.6133%2fapjcn.2016.25.2.02&partnerID=40&md5=4aede674d075cd71440e1168b12a57f7
description This study aimed to investigate the effects of parenteral nutrition (PN) administration of amino acids (AA) on physical changes among very low birth weight infants in a local hospital setting in Malaysia. A retrospective study was carried out at a hospital in Malaysia. Records of neonates prescribed PN in the neonatal unit in 2012 were screened for eligibility. A total of 199 premature neonates received PN support in the year 2012 and, of these, 100 fulfilled the inclusion criteria. The median value of AA intake on the first day of PN was 2.00 (< 28 weeks group); 1.00 (28-31 weeks group) and 0.75 (>31 weeks group). Neonates in the < 28 weeks group were more likely to receive AA at an earlier time and higher initial dose compared with the other age groups. The study also found that there was no statistically significant difference in the dose of AA on the first day of PN administration and that the significant variations in nutritional parameters among the subjects did not lead to differences in physical outcomes. This study identified that when PN is provided in the local hospital setting, it is likely that the current nutritional practices are inadequate to achieve the standard growth recommendations. Our findings call for a need to optimize AA and calorie intake since growth restriction is a morbidity which will affect the infants' growth and development. Current prescriptions for PN in this hospital need to be reviewed in order to improve patient outcomes.
publisher HEC Press
issn 09647058
language English
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