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Nutrition in Clinical Practice
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Parenteral Nutrition Support of a Patient With Chronic Mesenteric Artery Occlusive Disease

Charles Mueller, MS, RD, CNSD

Long Island College Hospital, Brooklyn, New York

Raffaele Borriello, MD

Long Island College Hospital, Brooklyn, New York

Lea Perlov-Antzis, RD

Long Island College Hospital, Brooklyn, New York

Vascular catastrophe resulting in a bowel infarction requiring massive resection is one of the most common indications for long-term total parenteral nutrition (TPN). The causes of mesenteric artery disease include embolic and thrombotic occlusions, nonocclusive mesenteric ischemia, and chronic mesenteric ischemia. This paper describes a case of a patient with chronic ischemia. The indication for TPN was intestinal angina limiting oral intake, not short-bowel syndrome as a result of bowel infarction and surgery. The patient had an extensive history of atherosclerotic disease and abdominal symptoms. Her nutritional status was maintained with TPN and oral intake as symptomatically tolerated. She eventually developed catheter sepsis. Her cardiopulmonary status deteriorated and she died. Progressive mesenteric ischemia and possible infarction may have contributed to her death. The patient had indicated she did not want surgery for a bowel infarction. She did consent to surgical correction of her disease, if feasible. Although TPN can maintain the nutritional and metabolic status of a patient with chronic mesenteric ischemia, the associated risk of catheter sepsis emphasizes the necessity for expedient treatment of the primary pathology.

Nutrition in Clinical Practice, Vol. 8, No. 2, 73-77 (1993)
DOI: 10.1177/011542659300800273


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