Fish oil fat emulsion nutritional support in the treatment of liver cirrhosis and portal hypertension in patients with pericardial devascularization with splenectomy: A randomized clinical trial
Ma Liya, Yue-ming He, Liu Quanyan, Zhang Zhonglin, Pan Dingyu, Yuan Yufeng, Liu Zhi-su
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objective
To explore the effect of fish oil fat emulsion as perioperative nutritional support on patients with liver cirrhosis and portal hypertension.
Methods
Randomized controlled clinical trial was performed between September 2011 and September 2017 in patients with liver cirrhosis and portal hypertension who underwent pericardial devascularization and splenectomy. Hypocaloric total parenteral nutritional support (TPN) started from the first day after the operation for 5 consecutive days. Patients were divided into experimental group and control group according to the type of fat emulsion used. 43 patients in experimental group were applied for fish oil fat emulsion injection (10% Omegaven) + medium long chain structure fat emulsion (20% STG) and 42 patients in control group were applied for medium long chain structure fat emulsion(20%STG). Liver function (total bilirubin and alanine aminotransferase), nutrition index (serum albumin and prealbumin), inflammatory mediators (TNF-ɑ, IL-6 and IL-10) were measured before and after the operation, and the clinical outcomes were observed.
Results
There was no statistically significant difference in liver function and nutritional indices between the experimental group and the control group (P>0.05). The inflammatory mediators like TNF-ɑ, IL-6 and IL-10 on the first day after surgery were significantly higher than those before surgery in both groups [experiment group: (225.54±54.78)vs.(61.49±16.47), (74.94±6.36)vs. (39.84±2.77), (77.53±11.4) vs. (46.05±6.13)ng/L ; control group: (229.26±62.15)vs.(63.48±13.76), (77.23±7.83) vs.(40.64±3.34), (73.89±7.97)vs.(44.88±5.72)ng/L ; P< 0.01]. With the progress of time, the proinflammatory factors like TNF-ɑ and IL-6 decreased after the operation and the range of decrease was higher in experiment group than in control group[d4-d1: (-56.88±31.63)vs.(-35.96±20.02), (-13.52±5.20)vs.(-6.38±2.84)ng/L; d7-d1: (-150.67±42.58)vs.(-132.79±53.35), (-27.04±8.97)vs.(-20.85±6.38)ng/L; P< 0.05]. The range of increase in anti-inflammatory media IL-10 was higher in experiment group than in the control group(d4-d1: (14.22±13.08)vs. (5.64±3.58)ng/L ; d7-d1: (17.78±5.58)vs. (-37.96±11.43)ng/L ; P<0.05). The incidence of grade Ⅲ complications and total complications (4.7% vs. 21.4%, 23.3% vs. 45.2%) and hospitalization time [(10.12 ±1.48) vs. (12.33±2.04) d] in the experimental group were significantly lower than those in the control group (P<0. 05).
Conclusions
In patients with liver cirrhosis and portal hypertension, perioperative nutritional support of fish oil fat emulsion can reduce systemic inflammatory response and operative complications and promote rapid recovery through its two-way regulation of inflammatory mediators.
Key words:
Fish oil fat emulsion; Inflammation mediators; Liver cirrhosis; Portal hypertension; Perioperative nutritional support
期刊介绍:
The Chinese Journal of Clinical Nutrition was founded in 1993. It is the first professional academic journal (bimonthly) in my country co-sponsored by the Chinese Medical Association and the Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences to disseminate information on clinical nutrition support, nutrient metabolism, the impact of nutrition support on outcomes and "cost-effectiveness", as well as translational medicine and nutrition research. It is also a professional journal of the Chinese Medical Association's Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition Branch.
The purpose of the Chinese Journal of Clinical Nutrition is to promote the rapid dissemination of knowledge on nutrient metabolism and the rational application of parenteral and enteral nutrition, focusing on the combination of multidisciplinary and multi-regional field investigations and clinical research. It mainly reports on nutritional risk screening related to the indications of parenteral and enteral nutrition support, "cost-effectiveness" research on nutritional drugs, consensus on clinical nutrition, guidelines, expert reviews, randomized controlled studies, cohort studies, glycoprotein and other nutrient metabolism research, systematic evaluation of clinical research, evidence-based case reports, special reviews, case reports and clinical experience exchanges, etc., and has a special column on new technologies related to the field of clinical nutrition and their clinical applications.