Can caloric restriction improve outcomes of elective surgeries?
Jesse Pittard CaronHelen ErnyeyMartin D RosenthalPublished in: JPEN. Journal of parenteral and enteral nutrition (2024)
Energy restriction (ER) is a nutrition method to reduce the amount of energy intake while maintaining adequate nutrition. In clinical medicine, applications of ER have been implicated in longevity, mortality, metabolic, immune, and psychological health. However, there are limited studies showing the clinical benefit of ER within the immediate surgical setting. A specific, clinically oriented summary of the potential applications of ER is needed to optimize surgery outcomes for patients. The purpose of this article is to examine how ER can be used for perioperative optimization to improve outcomes for the patient and surgeon. It will also explore how these outcomes can feasibly fit in with enhanced recovery after surgery protocols and can be used as a method for nutrition optimization in surgery. Despite evidence of caloric restriction improving outcomes in critically ill surgical patients, there is not enough evidence to conclude that ER, perioperatively across noncritically ill cohorts, improves postoperative morbidity and mortality in elective surgeries. Nevertheless, a contemporary account of how ER techniques may have a significant role in reducing risk factors of adverse surgical outcomes in this cohort, for example, by encouraging preoperative weight loss contributing to decreased operating times, is reviewed.
Keyphrases
- estrogen receptor
- patients undergoing
- endoplasmic reticulum
- risk factors
- breast cancer cells
- weight loss
- minimally invasive
- healthcare
- bariatric surgery
- public health
- coronary artery bypass
- cardiovascular disease
- mental health
- ejection fraction
- emergency department
- newly diagnosed
- end stage renal disease
- cardiac surgery
- case report
- depressive symptoms
- cardiovascular events
- climate change
- adipose tissue
- atrial fibrillation
- patient reported outcomes
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- roux en y gastric bypass