Hypovitaminos C och C-vitaminbrist hos kritiskt sjuka patienter trots rekommenderat enteralt och parenteralt intag
- 01De flesta kritiskt sjuka patienter hade låga C-vitaminnivåer
- 02Patienter med septisk chock hade ännu lägre nivåer
- 03Lågt C-vitamin var kopplat till högre inflammation
- 04Standardnutrition på IVA kan vara otillräcklig för att möta C-vitaminbehovet
Kritiskt sjuka patienter, särskilt de med sepsis, kan ha låga C-vitaminnivåer trots att de får standardnutrition.
Background: Vitamin C is an essential water-soluble nutrient which cannot be synthesised or stored by humans. It is a potent antioxidant with anti-inflammatory and immune-supportive roles. Previous research has indicated that vitamin C levels are depleted in critically ill patients. In this study we have assessed plasma vitamin C concentrations in critically ill patients relative to infection status (septic shock or non-septic) and level of inflammation (C-reactive protein concentrations). Vitamin C status was also assessed relative to daily enteral and parenteral intakes to determine if standard intensive care unit (ICU) nutritional support is adequate to meet the vitamin C needs of critically ill patients.
Methods: Forty-four critically ill patients (24 with septic shock, 17 non-septic, 3 uncategorised) were recruited from the Christchurch Hospital Intensive Care Unit. We measured concentrations of plasma vitamin C and a pro-inflammatory biomarker (C-reactive protein) daily over 4 days and calculated patients' daily vitamin C intake from the enteral or total parenteral nutrition they received. We compared plasma vitamin C and C-reactive protein concentrations between septic shock and non-septic patients over 4 days using a mixed effects statistical model, and we compared the vitamin C status of the critically ill patients with known vitamin C bioavailability data using a four-parameter log-logistic response model.
Results: Overall, the critically ill patients exhibited hypovitaminosis C (i.e., < 23 μmol/L), with a mean plasma vitamin C concentration of 17.8 ± 8.7 μmol/L; of these, one-third had vitamin C deficiency (i.e., < 11 μmol/L). Patients with hypovitaminosis C had elevated inflammation (C-reactive protein levels; P < 0.05). The patients with septic shock had lower vitamin C concentrations and higher C-reactive protein concentrations than the non-septic patients (P < 0.05). Nearly 40% of the septic shock patients were deficient in vitamin C, compared with 25% of the non-septic patients. These low vitamin C levels were apparent despite receiving recommended intakes via enteral and/or parenteral nutritional therapy (mean 125 mg/d).
Conclusions: Critically ill patients have low vitamin C concentrations despite receiving standard ICU nutrition. Septic shock patients have significantly depleted vitamin C levels compared with non-septic patients, likely resulting from increased metabolism due to the enhanced inflammatory response observed in septic shock.
- APA
- Anitra C Carr, Patrice C Rosengrave, Simone Bayer, Steve Chambers, Jan Mehrtens, & Geoff M Shaw (2017). Hypovitaminos C och C-vitaminbrist hos kritiskt sjuka patienter trots rekommenderat enteralt och parenteralt intag. https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/hypovitaminosis-c-and-vitamin-c-deficiency-in-critically-ill-patients-despite-recommended-enteral-and-parenteral-intakes/
- MLA
- Anitra C Carr, et al. "Hypovitaminos C och C-vitaminbrist hos kritiskt sjuka patienter trots rekommenderat enteralt och parenteralt intag." 2017, https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/hypovitaminosis-c-and-vitamin-c-deficiency-in-critically-ill-patients-despite-recommended-enteral-and-parenteral-intakes/.
- Chicago
- Anitra C Carr et al. 2017. "Hypovitaminos C och C-vitaminbrist hos kritiskt sjuka patienter trots rekommenderat enteralt och parenteralt intag.". https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/hypovitaminosis-c-and-vitamin-c-deficiency-in-critically-ill-patients-despite-recommended-enteral-and-parenteral-intakes/
- A+++2019Vitamin C administration in the critically ill: a summary of recent meta-analyses
- A+++2018Evidence is stronger than you think: a meta-analysis of vitamin C use in patients with sepsis
- A2017Vitamin C for preventing atrial fibrillation in high risk patients: a systematic review and meta-analysis
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