Journal of Human Nutrition and Dietetics, volume 30, issue 3, pages 302-308
Nitrogen balance in patients with hemiparetic stroke during the subacute rehabilitation phase
A. Wada
1
,
Michiyuki Kawakami
2
,
T. Otsuka
1
,
H. Aoki
3
,
A. Anzai
1
,
Y. Yamada
1
,
F. Liu
2
,
Eri Otaka
1
,
K Akaboshi
4
,
Meigen Liu
2
1
Department of Rehabilitation Medicine; National Higashisaitama Hospital; Hasuda Japan
|
2
3
Nutrition Management Office; National Higashisaitama Hospital; Hasuda Japan
|
4
Department of Rehabilitation Medicine; Ichikawa City Rehabilitation Hospital; Ichikawa Japan
|
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2017-02-02
scimago Q2
SJR: 0.866
CiteScore: 5.3
Impact factor: 2.9
ISSN: 09523871, 1365277X
PubMed ID:
28150353
Medicine (miscellaneous)
Nutrition and Dietetics
Abstract
In highly invasive diseases, metabolism commonly changes. Hypercatabolism is frequent in acute stroke, and nitrogen balance tends to be negative. However, there has been no study describing nitrogen balance in subacute and chronic stroke patients. The present study aimed to examine nitrogen balance in the subacute and chronic phases and to identify the factors related to it.Nitrogen balance was calculated from the collected urine of 56 patients with subacute stroke [mean (SD) 53.8 (18.4) days post-stroke] who were admitted for rehabilitation for their first-ever ischaemic or nonsurgical haemorrhagic stroke. In the first experiment, their nitrogen balance was measured during the rehabilitation phase, and factors (type, severity of hemiparesis, activities of daily living, dysphagia and malnutrition status) related to it were evaluated. The second experiment was performed to describe the time course of nitrogen balance in 31 consecutive patients, with assessments made at admission and at discharge.Nitrogen balance was positive in all patients in the subacute phase. A significant difference was seen in nitrogen balance between high and low fat-free mass in male patients. In the chronic phase, nitrogen balance was positive in 96% of the patients. There was no significant difference in nitrogen balance between discharge and admission.In the subacute and chronic phases of stroke, it was confirmed that hypercatabolism had resolved and that intensive rehabilitation is possible in the convalescent period of stroke.
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