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PG 26 – Update in Surgical Critical Care – GI/Nutrition Clay Cothren Burlew, MD FACS Director, Surgical Intensive Care Unit Program Director, Surgical Critical Care Fellowship Program Director, Trauma & Acute Care Surgery Fellowship Denver Health Medical Center Associate Professor of Surgery University of Colorado School of Medicine Denver, CO 1 Current Management of C. difficile Infection Clostridium difficile infections (CDI) are increasing in incidence and severity; it is the leading cause of hospital-associated infectious diarrhea. Predisposing factors include antibiotic use (most commonly fluoroquinolones, cephalosporins and clindamycin), older age, immunosuppression, GI surgery, inflammatory bowel disease, and hospitalization. Although the clinical presentation can vary, up to 10% of cases are considered severe or “fulminant”. Diagnosis of a CDI is based on a combination of clinical findings and laboratory testing positive for the C. difficile antigen and toxin. The historical cornerstones of treatment for CDI include discontinuing the inciting antibiotics, antimicrobial therapy, and organ support. Antibiotic treatment options for CDI include intravenous metronidazole, oral vancomycin, and vancomycin enemas. Recently, oral fidaxomicin has been shown to have equivalent rates of clinical cure for CDI with a lower recurrence of the infection compared to vancomycin treated patients. Due to the increasing incidence and the emergence of resistant CDI, fecal microbial transplantation has been suggested as an alternative therapy. Originally described in 1958, recent trials of fecal transplantation in highly selected patients have supported its use in refractory cases. Surgical management of CDI is reserved for patients with marked clinical deterioration or shock. Colectomy with ileostomy is the definitive surgical option. More recently colon-sparing surgery for CDI has been proposed with diverting loop ileostomy and colonic lavage to reduce patient morbidity. The Role of Total Parenteral Nutrition Nutrition support is pivotal in the management of the critically ill patient. In general there are 2 groups that benefit the most from nutrition support: malnourished patients (BMI<25, 2 BMI>35) and those who are in the ICU for prolonged stays and hence are at risk for energy and protein deficits. Enteral nutrition is less expensive and associated with fewer complications than parenteral nutrition. Additionally, early enteral nutrition in critically injured patients has been shown to decrease septic complications. Therefore, the ideal nutrition therapy for a critically ill patient is enteral nutrition within 24-48 hours of ICU admission. However, patients may have contraindications to full enteral feeding (vasopressors, recent surgery, bowel discontinuity, ileus). In patients who are low risk (normal BMI, short ICU stay, low mortality risk), delaying TPN until after hospital day 7 is associated with fewer complications and faster recovery, but no difference in mortality. However, in high risk patients unable to tolerate enteral nutrition, parenteral nutrition is associated with decreased nosocomial infections and shorter duration of mechanical ventilation; in these high risk patients, TPN should be initiated early in the patient’s ICU course. Immunonutrition Immunonutrition, also referred to as an immunomodulating formula for enteral feeding, is one of the many classes of enteral nutrition that is commercially available. These formulas contain nutrients such as glutamine, arginine, omega-3 fatty acids, nucleotides, and antioxidants added to standard enteral formulas. Immunonutrition is hypothesized to enhance the immunologic response and reduce the inflammatory response. Studies to date, however, have shown mixed outcomes with immunonutrition. Current guidelines from the SCCM and ASPEN recommend that immune-modulating formulations should be used in appropriate patient populations (trauma, burn, head and neck cancers, and major elective surgery). Interestingly, subset analysis demonstrated an increase in mortality in severely septic patients receiving 3 immune-enhancing enteral formulas. Experts believe that the component likely causing harm is the nutrient arginine. Bibliography: 1. Neal MD, Alverdy JC, Hall DE, Simmons RL, Zuckerbraun BS. Diverting loop ileostomy and colon lavage: An alternative to total abdominal colectomy for the treatment of severe, complicated clostridium difficile associated disease. Ann Surg 2011;254:423-426. 2. Singer P, Pichard C. Reconciling divergent results of the latest parenteral nutrition studies in the ICU. Curr Opin Clin Nutr Metab Care. 2013;16(2):187-93. 3. Canadian Clinical Practice Guidelines. http://www.criticalcarenutrition.com. 4