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Copyright ©2014 Baishideng Publishing Group Inc.
World J Gastroenterol. Nov 21, 2014; 20(43): 16123-16131
Published online Nov 21, 2014. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v20.i43.16123
Table 1 Studies investigating the potential benefits of enteral vs parenteral feeding
Ref.YearCountry/institutionNo. of patientsControl armBenefits of enteral vs parenterlal feeding
McClave et al[2]1997United States/University of Louisville, KY30Parenteral feedingCheaper, better glucose control
Kalfarentzos et al[4]1997Greece/University of Patras38Parenteral feedingLower complication rate, cheaper
Windsor et al[5]1998United Kingdom/St James’s Univ Hospital London34Parenteral feedingDecreased organ failure and complication rates
Paraskeva et al[7]2001Greece/Pireus General Hospital23Parenteral feedingLower surgical intervention rate
Oláh et al[59]2002Hungary/Petz A. Teaching Hospital, Gyor89Parenteral feedingLess septic complications
Abou-Assi et al[9]2002United States/Virginia Univ. Hosp., RA53Parenteral feedingLess septic complications, cheaper
Gupta et al[10]2003United Kingdom/Southampton General Hospital17Parenteral feedingShorter hospital stay, cheaper
Louie et al[12]2005Canada/University of Alberta28Parenteral feedingLower complication rate, better glucose control
Eckerwall et al[37]2006Sweden/Lund University Hospital69Parenteral feedingLower complication, MOF and mortality rates
Petrov et al[13]2006Russia/Nizhny Novgorod Hosp22Parenteral feedingNo significant difference
Table 2 Studies investigating the potential benefits of early vs late enteral feeding
Ref.YearCountry/InstitutionNo. of patientsControl armBenefits of early vs late enteral feeding
Sun et al[29]2013China/Nanjing Medical University60Late enteral feedingLower infective complication, MOF and SIRS rates
Wereszczynska-Siemiatkowska et al[30]2013Poland/Medical University Bialystok197Late enteral feedingLower complication and mortality rates
Sun et al[31]2013China/Nanjing Medical University60Late enteral feedingLower intra-abdominal hypertension rate
Table 3 Anti-infective and immunomodulatory properties of immunonutrients
Anti-infective and immunomodulatory properties of immunonutrients
Reduced bacterial overgrowth
Maintenance of natural balance of intestinal flora
Reduced intestinal permeability
Reduced serum endotoxin levels
Antagonist effect against pathogenic bacteria
Prevent pathogenic bacterial adherence to intestinal mucosa
Bacterocidal and bacterostatic effect (lactic acid production)
Increased proportions of NK cells, T-lmphocytes, Ig-A producing plasma cells
Increased phagocytosis