Nutritional and Pharmacological Modulation of the Metabolic Response of Severely Burned Patients: Review of the Literature (Part II)*
Overview
Authors
Affiliations
Severe burn patients are some of the most challenging critically ill patients, with an extreme state of physiological stress and an overwhelming systemic metabolic response. Increased energy expenditure to cope with this insult necessitates mobilization of large amounts of substrate from fat stores and active muscle for repair and fuel, leading to catabolism. The hypermetabolic response can last for as long as nine months to one year after injury and is associated with impaired wound healing, increased infection risks, erosion of lean body mass, hampered rehabilitation, and delayed reintegration of burn survivors into society. Reversal of the hypermetabolic response by manipulating the patient's physiological and biochemical environment through the administration of specific nutrients, growth factors, or other agents, often in pharmacological doses, is emerging as an essential component of the state of the art in severe burn management. Early enteral nutritional support, control of hyperglycaemia, blockade of catecholamine response, and use of anabolic steroids have all been proposed to attenuate hypermetabolism or to blunt catabolism associated with severe burn injury. The present study is a literature review of the proposed nutritional and metabolic therapeutic measures in order to determine evidence-based best practice. Unfortunately, the present state of our knowledge does not allow the formulation of clear-cut guidelines. Only general trends can be outlined which will certainly have some practical applications but above all will dictate future research in the field.
Modulation of Burn Hypermetabolism in Preclinical Models.
Eldaly A, Avila F, Torres R, Maita K, Garcia J, Serrano L Cureus. 2023; 15(1):e33518.
PMID: 36779088 PMC: 9904913. DOI: 10.7759/cureus.33518.
Management of burns in the elderly.
Abu-Sittah G, Chahine F, Janom H Ann Burns Fire Disasters. 2017; 29(4):249-245.
PMID: 28289356 PMC: 5347309.
Chen G, Shao H, Pan X Biomed Rep. 2016; 4(5):551-556.
PMID: 27123246 PMC: 4840508. DOI: 10.3892/br.2016.635.
Physical rehabilitation of pediatric burns.
Atiyeh B, Janom H Ann Burns Fire Disasters. 2014; 27(1):37-43.
PMID: 25249846 PMC: 4158448.
Atiyeh B, Gunn S, Dibo S Ann Burns Fire Disasters. 2011; 21(4):175-81.
PMID: 21991133 PMC: 3188202.