Enteral vs Parenteral Nutrition After Major Abdominal Surgery: An Even Match

  • Bossola, M
  • Pacelli, F
  • Papa, V.
Nutrition in Clinical Practice 17(1):p 44, February 2002.

ABSTRACT:

Hypothesis:

Immediate enteral feeding following major abdominal surgery reduces postoperative complications and mortality when compared with parenteral nutrition.

Design:

A prospective multicenter randomized trial.

Setting:

A university hospital department of digestive surgery.

Patients and Interventions:

Two hundred forty-one malnourished patients undergoing major elective abdominal surgery were randomly assigned to receive, after surgery, either enteral (enteral nutrition group: 119 patients) or parenteral nutrition (total parenteral nutrition group: 122 patients). The patients were monitored for postoperative complications and mortality.

Results:

The rate of major postoperative complications was similar in the enteral and parenteral groups (enteral nutrition group: 37.8%; total parenteral nutrition group: 39.3%; P was not significant), as were the overall postoperative mortality rates (5.9% and 2.5%, respectively; P was not significant).

Conclusions:

The present study failed to demonstrate that enteral feeding following major abdominal surgery reduces postoperative complications and mortality when compared with parenteral nutrition. (Arch Surg 136:933–936, 2001)

Copyright ©2002Sage Publications
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