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Artificial Nutrition Support Jason Payne-James

Artificial Nutrition Support By Jason Payne-James

Artificial Nutrition Support by Jason Payne-James


$19.49
Condition - Very Good
Out of stock

Summary

Any healthcare professional with, or developing an interest in, clinical nutrition will be able to use this textbook as their sole source of information for the formation of a clinical nutrition support service of excellence.

Artificial Nutrition Support Summary

Artificial Nutrition Support: In Clinical Practice by Jason Payne-James

Any healthcare professional with, or developing an interest in, clinical nutrition will be able to use this textbook as their sole source of information for the formation of a clinical nutrition support service of excellence. The first three parts of the book will enable a clear perspective of the metabolism and physiology of clinical nutrition to be related to the practical application of support techniques. The fourth part of the book highlights the role of nutrition support in specific disease groups. A number of additional chapters have been added, and modifications made to the content of chapters from the first edition to cover newer areas or areas of omission.

Artificial Nutrition Support Reviews

The practice of enteral and parenteral nutrition support has evolved significantly in recent years, in response to an increasing number of basic, preclinical, and clinical investigations in the field. This text by Payne-James et al. provides a comprehensive, practical, and state-of-the-art textbook that should be useful to multidisciplinary health care personnel (physicians, dietitians, pharmacists, and nurses) involved in the clinical diagnosis and the treatment of nutritional disorders in hospitalized and home patients, as well as patient-orientated investigators in this field. Although the trust of the book is primarily concerned with specialized nutrition support in clinical care and in specific disease states, other chapters provide basic and translational information on nutritional physiology and pathophysiology that will be useful to medical students, doctoral students, and postdoctoral trainees interested in nutrition science. The book is well organized; all chapters are written by acknowledged figures in nutrition support and nutrition/metabolism, and the majority of the chapters provide clear and useful tables and figures. The first 7 chapters outline general concepts of energy and protein metabolism in physiologic and specific pathophysiology situations. Subsequent chapters review both the prevalence and the consequences of malnutrition in hospital patients. These sections are followed by comprehensive reviews on the indications for specialized nutrition support, techniques of enteral and parenteral nutrient delivery, nutrient formulations, and complications of enteral and parenteral nutrition that are clearly outlined, with little repetition. One particularly well-done and practical chapter highlights methods and efficacy of oral diet administration and oral supplements in the hospital and postacute care setting. The latter and most extensive section of the book addresses altered nutritional needs and the role of specialized feeding for patients with specific diseases, including inflammatory bowel disease, short bowel syndrome, pancreatitis, cancer trauma, and sepsis. Specific requirements and administration techniques for children are explained in two excellent and concise chapters. The overall style is clear, concise and easy to read. One weakness is that subsections of several chapters deal with the subject matter of entire independent chapters. However, the editors have generally done a good job in limiting repetitions; in a book dealing with a specialized topic, some repetitions are unavoidable. For example, the chapter on malnutrition in hospitalized patients provides information supplied in the chapters on enteral nutrition, supplement use, and nutrition for patients in intensive care units. Similarly, much of the information about the prevalence and consequences of malnutrition in hospital patients in this chapter is repeated again in the chapter on the cost and effectiveness of nutrition support. Another minor problem is the inconsistent use of energy units (kilojoules vs kilocalories) in some chapters. The chapters tend to follow a consistent format, often beginning with a historical background, followed by the particular metabolic and physiologic alterations observed in the specific disease, a discussion on the experimental and clinical approaches to the nutritional treatment, and, finally, practical guidelines for the daily nutritional treatment of those patients (determined from both evidence-based data and the author's experience). Most chapters contain tables, figures, and/or algorithms that provide additional information, including summaries of relevant published studies and useful clinical guidelines. The chapter on nutritional support for patients with cancer is especially good in this regard. It includes a comprehensive discussion on what is known concerning metabolic changes caused by tumors themselves and by oncologic therapy, with many clarifying tables and figures. In addition, the different approaches to providing nutritional support to these patients are presented didactically, with an understanding discussion on the dilemma of nutritional support for terminal patients. Similarly, the chapters on nutritional support for

Table of Contents

1. Metabolic response to starvation, injury and sepsis; 2. Protein and amino acid metabolism in the whole body and in the tissues; 3. Energy metabolism; 4. Liver and nutrient metabolism; 5. Cytokines and nutrition; 6. Physiology of nutrient absorption and patterns of intestinal metabolism; 7. The immune system and nutrition support; 8. Malnutrition in hospitalised patients and assessment of nutrition support; 9. Nutrition assessment; 10. Adult macronutrient requirements; 11. Adult micronutrient requirements; 12. Paediatric nutrition requirements; 13. Nutrition, appetite control and disease; 14. The role of a nutrition support team; 15. Hospital food as treatment; 16. Oral diet administration supplementation; 17. Enteral nutrition tubes and techniques of delivery; 18. Enteral diet choices and formulations; 19. Complications of enteral nutrition; 20. Paediatric enteral nutrition; 21. Home enteral nutrition; 22. Venous access for parenteral nutrition; 23. Parenteral nutrition substrates; 24. Parenteral nutrition formulation; 25. Metabolic complications of parenteral nutrition; 26. Paediatric parenteral nutrition; 27. Home parenteral nutrition; 28. Nutrition support in liver disease; 29. Nutrition support in trauma and sepsis; 30. Nutrition support in renal disease; 31. Nutrition support in respiratory disease; 32. Nutrition and inflammatory bowel disease; 33. Nutrition support during the acute care of moderately or severely burnt patients; 34. Nutrition support for the intensive care unit; 35. Nutrition support for the surgical patients; 36. Nutrition support in patients with human immunodeficiency virus; 37. Nutrition support in patients with cancer; 38. Nutrition support in the elderly; 39. Fluid and nutrition support in the short bowel syndrome; 40. Nutrition support in pancreatic disease; 41. Cost-effectiveness of nutrition support; 42. Role of enteral and parenteral nutrition.

Additional information

GOR006432471
9781900151979
1900151979
Artificial Nutrition Support: In Clinical Practice by Jason Payne-James
Used - Very Good
Hardback
Cambridge University Press
2001-01-07
816
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - Artificial Nutrition Support